Unswervingly
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is zh ō ngsh ǐ B ù y ú, which means from beginning to end, never change. It comes from the biography of Yao (Wang Shou) in the old book of Tang Dynasty.
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: never easy, never change, never change
The origin of Idioms
In the biography of Yao (Wang Shou) in the old book of the Tang Dynasty: "Qing was early, he chaoen was appointed, and Si Zhong was appointed. In the middle, there are many benefits; in the defense, there are all efforts to train soldiers. It's always the same
Idiom usage
To keep one's word means to keep one's word.
Chinese PinYin : zhōng shǐ bù yú
Unswervingly
relay on hearsay instead of seeing for oneself. yǐ ěr wéi mù
overindulge oneself in wine and women. chén miǎn jiǔ sè
use the past to attack the present. yǐ gǔ fēi jīn