Fu sunyinzi
Fu sun Yinzi, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is f ú s ū NY ì NZ ǐ, which means that Fu Yin extends to descendants. It comes from the story of pipa, five niangs bury their father-in-law.
The origin of Idioms
Ben Gaoming of Yuan Dynasty wrote in the story of pipa, Wu Niang buries her father-in-law: "this grave is only dry if you want to get it. It's hard to know if you can be blessed with sun yam Tzu. Then you can get a third Duke, and you can't help yourself."
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attributive; used in writing
Fu sunyinzi
the mirror of qin hung on high -- perspicacious decisions in deciding criminal cases - qín jìng gāo xuán
look after the suffering of the people - guān xīn mín mò
If you feed a thousand miles, you will be hungry - qiān lǐ kuì liáng,shì yǒu jī sè