cling to one's view
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y ī K ǒ uy ǎ OD ì ng, which means to hold on. Metaphor: stick to one statement and never change it. From officialdom reform.
Idiom explanation
He held on. Metaphor: stick to one statement and never change it.
The origin of Idioms
The tenth chapter of the Qing Dynasty's Wu Mingshi's Officialdom reform: "first, put the abbot monk Hui Xiu on trial and ask him where he hid Li Guobin. Hui Xiu insists that he doesn't recognize Li Guobin."
Idiom usage
As a predicate or adverbial, it refers to affirmation. Old Shandong shook his head, ~ "don't look, I know it! The old weigher in my family uses fourteen new weighers, one jin. It can't be wrong. " (Chapter 11 of yingchunhua by Feng Deying)
Idiom story
After discovering the totem handbag, Mrs. Wang searched all the maids in Daguan garden and drove away Siqi, the maid of Yingchun. She felt that she could not get rid of her hatred. Because Baoyu was mature, she drove Qingwen out of Daguan garden. Baoyu stealthily goes to Qingwen's house to visit her. Qingwen feels aggrieved. Because she is beautiful, she is determined to be a fox spirit
Chinese PinYin : yī kǒu yǎo dìng
cling to one's view
the people cannot stand the pressure of the government. mín bù kān mìng
most sagacious and intelligent. zhì shèng zhì míng
Boil ginger and drink vinegar. áo jiāng xiā cù
better to lead in a small position than to take a back seat under a great leader. jī shī niú cóng
become destitute and homeless. liú luò shī suǒ