leave a name that will stink to eternity
A Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y í ch à UW à NNI á n, which means "lasting evil". It's from Yiyuan Jiyan.
The origin of Idioms
Wang Shizhen's Yiyuan Zhiyan in the Ming Dynasty (Volume 3): "Huan xuanzi's constant words" can't live forever, but should also cause a bad smell for thousands of years ", has been scolded by scholars up to now
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate, attribute, or object. Qu Yan said, "if you can change the evil and follow the good, return to the Heavenly Kingdom, make contributions to the country, and live forever, it will be better than being trapped in injustice and causing a bad smell for thousands of years." The 47th chapter of the history of the empress of Zen
Chinese PinYin : yí chòu wàn nián
leave a name that will stink to eternity
put all sorts of things together. dōng pīn xī còu
to follow what is evil is like the collapsing of a hill. cóng è rú bēng
Don't burn incense at ordinary times, but rush to embrace Buddha's feet. píng shí bù shāo xiāng,jí lái bào fó jiǎo