to be drowned
Buried in the belly of a fish, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Z à ngsh à NY ú f à, meaning that the body is eaten by a fish, meaning drowned in the water. From fisherman.
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym] life goes to the yellow spring, one's life cries out, and jade meteorite fades away
The origin of Idioms
The fisherman, written by Qu Yuan of Chu in the Warring States period, said: "it's better to go to Xiang River and be buried in the belly of river fish. Is an Neng covered with the dust of the secular world with his white
Idiom usage
To be formal; to be predicate or object; to be submerged in dead water. As long as you are willing to take this car, I will accompany you for 300 rounds until the heavy rain washes the car into the river. Let's go together. (Liu Shaotang's ten steps of grass) my fellow shipmates are all dead, but I am doomed. (Daniel Defoe's Robinson Crusoe) Ming Yang rousheng's the story of the jade ring. The thirtieth episode: "it's better to be buried than to fly. 」
Chinese PinYin : zàng shēn yū fù
to be drowned
fight criminal offenders by death penalty. yǐ shā zhǐ shā
stand by watching others battle. zuò bì shàng guān
cover one 's face and creep away. fèng tóu shǔ cuàn
Laughing and scolding are all articles. xī xiào nù mà,jiē chéng wén zhāng
The flood washed the Dragon King temple. dà shuǐ chōng le lóng wáng miào
be by nature unconventional and straight forward. luò tuò bù jī