immortal
Bufeijianghe, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is B ù f è Iji ā NGH é, which means to praise a writer or his works for immortality. It comes from the six quatrains of drama.
Idiom usage
It is widely used in writing to describe good works. Yao Ying's Fu Yang Jun's treatise on poetry in Qing Dynasty: it's not appropriate to use servant as the metaphor of "never waste the river". This kind of self-sufficiency makes you laugh for others?
The origin of Idioms
The second part of "Xi Wei Liu jueju" written by Du Fu of Tang Dynasty: Wang Yang and Lu Luo were in the style of that time, and they were frivolous, but they did not stop writing. Er Cao's body and name are all destroyed, but the river flows forever. Later, he praised the writer or his works for immortality.
immortal
Don't look at the monk's face, look at the Buddha's face - bù kàn sēng miàn kàn fó miàn
the evening of the moon and the morning of the flowers - yuè xī huā chén
more than a match for ten thousand men - wàn fū mò dāng