bring glory to one 's parents and become celebrated
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Xi ǎ NZ ǔ y á NGM í ng, which means to make the ancestors show off and spread their fame. It comes from Xiwu Jiangxiao's trilogy.
The origin of Idioms
Chen Lin of the Han Dynasty wrote in his trilogy of calling on Wu generals and schools: "the elders of Wu Zhugu and Lu Jiu families have high positions in the world. They should report to the Han Dynasty and make their ancestors famous."
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms: to show the ancestors to honor the ancestors, to show the ancestors to promote the ancestors
Idiom usage
Used as predicate, attribute, object, etc
Examples
The 47th chapter of the complete biography of Shuoyue written by Qian Cai in Qing Dynasty: "Kuang is a man in the world. He needs to make a great career and make his ancestors famous. How can he die old?"
Chinese PinYin : xiǎn zǔ yáng míng
bring glory to one 's parents and become celebrated
misfortune might be a blessing disguise. huò fú xiāng yī