fall into oblivion
Oblivion, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y ā nm ò w ú w é n, which means reputation is buried, no one knows. It comes from the biography of Yanghu in the book of Jin.
Analysis of Idioms
It is unknown, unknown and unknown
Antonym: famous, world-famous, famous
Idiom usage
It has a derogatory meaning
Examples
All the talents and knowledge can be recorded for a long time. Preface to the book of recording ghosts by Zhong Sicheng in Yuan Dynasty
The origin of Idioms
The biography of Yanghu in the book of Jin: "there are so many talented and talented people here, such as me and Qing."! It's all gone, it's sad. "
Chinese PinYin : yān mò wú wén
fall into oblivion
steal a little leisure from the rush of business. máng lǐ tōu xián
to concentrate on the main points. tí gāng jǔ lǐng
entrust to another 's care the children one is about to leave behind as orphans. xíng gū jì mìng
Take advantage of one's power. shè wēi shàn shì