Surpassing the past
Chinese idioms, Pinyin is ch ā OJ ī NGU à ng ǔ, meaning beyond the ancient and modern. It comes from the list of honorific titles in congratulatory books.
Idiom explanation
Champion: outstanding person. Beyond the past and the present.
The origin of Idioms
Han Yu, Tang Dynasty, wrote "all kinds of beautiful things have the same name and reality, which is magnificent and surpassing the present."
Idiom usage
As predicate, attribute, used to praise people examples master's beautiful poems are beyond the present and beyond the past, just one person. The second volume of Sui Han Tang Shi Hua by Zhang Jie of Song Dynasty
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms: beyond the present and beyond the past Antonyms: everywhere and commonplace
Surpassing the past
hand out official posts and make promises to grant special favour - fēng guān xǔ yuàn
sacrifice oneself to protect others - shě jǐ wèi rén