heaven robs one of his soul
It is a Chinese word, Pinyin Ti ā NDU ó Q í pॸ, which refers to people's near death.
Ti ā NDU ó Q í P ò means that people are not far away from death. It's the same as "Heaven seizes the soul". [source] Volume 7 of the bamboo slips of the Song Dynasty by Shen zuozhi: "it is said that things are fallacious and clumsy. It is said that heaven takes its soul." [example] chapter 34 of the chronicles of the Eastern Zhou Dynasty by Feng Menglong of the Ming Dynasty: "the spirit of heaven is overwhelming, and you can go to the meeting by bike. Today, I will take thousands of chariots and generals to crush the city of Suiyang and avenge the Qi and Zhou States! " Wang Fuzhi of the Qing Dynasty wrote "Duan ye, stealing; Zhong Kan, betraying; heaven takes its soul, so it's better to be obsessed with ghosts and die." [usage] as an object or attribute
Chinese PinYin : tiān duó qí pò
heaven robs one of his soul
get to the bottom of the matter. qióng yuán jìng wěi
ideal setting for a couple in love. qiáng tóu mǎ shàng
sharpen one 's spear only before going into battle. lín zhèn mó qiāng