abiding
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is zh ī s ǐ B ù y ú, which means to remain unchanged until death. It describes loyalty, which is the same as death. It comes from the Song Dynasty Su Zhe's sacrifice to the dead son-in-law and Yimin's prose.
The origin of Idioms
Su Zhe, Song Dynasty, wrote in the article of offering sacrifices to his dead son-in-law: "if a woman has a strong ambition, she will stay alone. He wrote a poem named "Bai Zhou", which will never die. "
Idiom usage
It refers to loyalty.
Discrimination of words
It's all about death. It's all about death
Chinese PinYin : zhī sǐ bù yú
abiding
Chicken Intestines and dog bellies. jī cháng gǒu dù
hastily to declare the matter closed. cǎo shuài shōu bīng