endure for centuries
It is a Chinese idiom, and the Pinyin is B ǎ ISH ì B ù m ó. The explanation is that it has a long history and will never die.
Idioms and allusions
It comes from the biography of the southern Xiongnu in the book of the later Han Dynasty: "the difference of thousands of miles is from HaoDuan, and the source of loss is never worn away." I set up my son's name, and I will never forget it. (Han Yu, Tang Dynasty)
Discrimination of words
Idiom explanation: wipe out, wipe out. The idiom comes from the biography of the southern Xiongnu in the later Han Dynasty by Fan Ye of the Southern Dynasty: "the difference of thousands of miles comes from the end of a thousand miles. The source of loss is never worn away." Idioms are complex: idioms are not polished; idiom spelling bsbm; idiom phonetic notation ㄅㄞㄞㄕㄧㄅㄨㄇㄛㄛ; idiom usage is used as predicate and object; it refers to people's achievements and contributions; idiom structure is more formal; idiom structure is more formal; ancient idiom synonym will never die out idiom example my son's name will never be polished. (a letter to the poor written by Tang Hanyu)
endure for centuries
get to the bottom of the matter - qióng yuán jìng wěi
take instant advantage of an opportunity that comes only once in a long while - jiàn tù gù quǎn
be cast aside like the fan in autumn - qiū shàn jiàn juān
sit side by side and talk intimately - cù xī tán xīn