beheaded
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is t ó uz ú y ì ch ù, meaning to be chopped. It's from the songs of Chu: national humiliation.
The origin of Idioms
Chu · Chu · Qu Yuan's "Chu Ci · Guoshang" in the Warring States Period: "the first body leaves Xi, the heart does not punish."
Idiom usage
To be beheaded is to be beheaded. Example biography of Huaiyin marquis in historical records: "the king of the Han Dynasty borrowed troops to go down to the East and killed an Jun in the south of the river. His head and feet were different, and his death was a laugh for the whole world." In the biography of Xiong Tingbi in the history of the Ming Dynasty, it is said that "the biography of the first frontier court is also a warning for those who are loyal in the face of disaster."
Chinese PinYin : tóu zú yì chǔ
beheaded
similarly afflicted people pity each other. tóng bìng xiāng lián