To live up to one's death

To live up to one's death

Chinese idiom, Pinyin is d ǎ Oji é s ǐ y ì, which means to stick to moral integrity and die for righteousness. It comes from the book of Jin, Emperor Yuan Ji.

Idiom usage

As a predicate or attributive

The origin of Idioms

"The book of Jin, the record of the emperor of the Yuan Dynasty" says, "only when you do justice and die, you will be punished by the axe and the Tomahawk with the shame of snowing the world."

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