go down to posterity
Immortal, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y ǒ ngchu í B ù Xi ǔ. It means that brilliant deeds and great spirit will never be lost. It comes from the book of Wei, the second chapter of Gaozu.
The origin of Idioms
"Wei Shu · Gaozu Ji Xia" said: "although it is not enough to outline fan Wandu, it is immortal, and it can explain the current situation and straighten the current affairs."
Idiom usage
It is used as predicate and attributive, with commendatory meaning, naming sound, deeds, etc. Chapter 19 of the three heroes and five righteousness written by Shi Yukun in Qing Dynasty: "on the left side, the imperial edict was built to build the Kougong Rensi hall, which was called" Zhonglie Temple "; on the right side, the imperial edict was built to build the Qinfeng and Yuzhong ancestral halls, which were called" Shuangyi Temple ", which was also granted ChenLin as the capital hall and fan Zonghua as chengxinlang according to the Empress Dowager's edict; on the other hand, the broken kiln was changed into a temple, which was granted 1000 taels of silver and 10 hectares of incense, which was called fan Zonghua as the temple official, and the spring and Autumn Festival was held forever "Immortality."
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym famous, immortal, immortal. antonym has a long history.
Chinese PinYin : yǒng chuí bù xiǔ
go down to posterity
each trying to cheat or outwit the other. ěr yú wǒ zhà
like nature itself -- highest quality. hùn rán tiān chéng
expect to see someone who never comes. wàng yǎn yù chuān