A disaster to the East
The disaster of Dongguan is a Chinese idiom. The Pinyin is d ō nggu ā nzh ī y ā ng, which means that when Confucius was a rusikou, he killed shaozheng more than Dongguan. Later, it is used to refer to the disaster of death. It comes from "Confucius' family language · Shizhu".
The origin of Idioms
"Confucius was Lu Sikou, and he took photos of him Seven days later, Zheng Mao, a political official, was killed under the two outlooks. "
Idiom usage
To be the object of; refer to the calamity of death. Example: in Han Dynasty, Huan Kuan's on salt and iron, ode to the sages: "if you don't see what you have achieved, you will see what you have suffered. If you have a felony, you can't die."
A disaster to the East
one 's second parent said with gratitude of a person who has saved or spared one 's life - zài shēng fù mǔ
advance by an inch but retreat by a foot -- to lose much more than what one gets - jǐn cùn tuì chǐ
beautifully designed and bound book - jīn tí yù xiè