Indomitable
Yinlesongruo, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y ì NL é ISH ò uruॸ, which means to describe an official who holds several positions and has a great momentum. It comes from the book of Han, biography of sycophants, Shi Xian.
The origin of Idioms
Ban Gu in the Eastern Han Dynasty wrote "the evil of prison, the evil of stone, the evil of five deer, the evil of guest"! Why are there so many seals, and if the ribbon is evil! "
Idiom usage
It is used as predicate and attributive. However, if an indomitable person is like an indomitable person, he must be delicate and sharp. On the urgency of world change by Yan Fu in Qing Dynasty
Chinese PinYin : yìn léi shòu ruò
Indomitable
put on gay clothing and powder one 's face. nóng zhuāng yàn mǒ
take it leisurely and unoppressively. cóng róng bù pò
The three principles are the same. sān zhǐ xiàng gōng