matchless merit
Thankless service is a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is B ù sh ǎ ngzh ī g ō ng, which means to describe great service. It comes from the biography of Huaiyin marquis in historical records.
Idiom explanation
The credit is great.
Idioms and allusions
[source]: Sima Qian's biography of the Marquis of Huaiyin in historical records in the Western Han Dynasty: "when a minister hears that he is brave and slightly shaken, he is in danger, but he who has achieved great success in the world will not be rewarded." Since the founding of the people's Republic of China, Dai Zhenzhu has made great achievements in the dark world? In the biography of Liu Gu in the book of Jin and the biography of Shen Yue in the history of South China, it is said that "it is an unrequited achievement to level a country alone." "In the biography of Xiao in the new book of Tang Dynasty," the emperor tasted and said: "in Wude season, the supreme emperor had to abolish the Legislative Yuan. He took care of me and did not appreciate the merits. He could not be afraid of death at that time
Discrimination of words
A great achievement
usage
As subject, object and complement, it is a great contribution to describe
matchless merit
Gather the bone and blow the soul - liǎn gǔ chuí hún
lift one 's feet very high and put them down very slowly - jiǎo gāo bù dī
Deep learning but short learning - jí shēn gěng duǎn
sounds of crowing cocks and barking dogs were heard around -- two places are very close to each other - jī quǎn xiāng wén