die for one's country
Sacrifice for the country, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is w è IGU ó Ju ā NQ ū, meaning to sacrifice one's life for the country. From the romance of Fengshen.
Idiom explanation
Donation: sacrifice; body: body, life.
The origin of Idioms
The fifty second chapter of the romance of the gods by Xu Zhonglin of the Ming Dynasty: "poor Prime Minister Cheng Tang, who died for his country."
Idiom usage
To sacrifice one's life for one's country. Chapter 39 of the complete biography of Shuoyue written by Qian Cai in Qing Dynasty: "if you die for your country and go to the battlefield, you can win glory with your heart."
Chinese PinYin : wèi guó juān qū
die for one's country
sell offices and barter ranks. mài guān yù jué
hit the enemy 's crucial point. è gāng fǔ bèi
place a substitute by subterfuge. tōu tiān huàn rì
eulogize the past at the expense of the present. sòng gǔ fēi jīn
the lively and vigorous movement of penmanship -- fine calligraphy. luán fēi fèng zhù
recuperate and build up strength. xiū yǎng shēng xī