when one has passed away
A hundred years later, the Chinese idiom, Pinyin is B ǎ ini á nzh ī h ò u, which means a taboo name for death. From Cao Cao Ji, Volume 2, military order.
The origin of Idioms
In Cao Cao Ji, Volume 2, military order of Qiao, it is said that "to set up a temple for the survivors, the envoys should consider their ancestors. What a pity I will have in a hundred years
Idiom usage
It is used as predicate, object and attribute; it is used as a euphemism of death. example where will you be buried in a hundred years? (Lu Xun's "undecided topic" grass (V)), yuan · Wuhan minister's "Lao sheng'er" the third fold: "my daughter a hundred years later, can I bury her in my Liu's grave, or in his Zhang's grave?"
Idiom story
My purpose of launching a righteous army is to root out riots for the whole world. But the people in my hometown almost died. I walked in the territory all day, but I didn't see an acquaintance. This situation really makes me sad. Since the launching of the righteous army, those who have no descendants have their relatives as their heirs. They were given land, cattle, schools and teachers. Build temples for the living so that they can sacrifice their ancestors. If the soul knows, I will have no regrets after my death!
when one has passed away
The morning hears the way, the night dies may carry on - zhāo wén dào,xī sǐ kě yǐ
Fixing the chaos and supporting the decline - dìng luàn fú shuāi