The end of success
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is g ō ngch é NGG ǔ K ū, which means that many other people have to make great sacrifices for their own interests. It comes from Cao song's Ji Hai Sui in Tang Dynasty.
Idiom explanation
It means that many other people have to make great sacrifices for their own interests.
The origin of Idioms
One of the poems of Cao song in the Tang Dynasty is "to confer a marquis on the basis of the emperor's words, one will achieve great success, and ten thousand bones will wither."
Idiom usage
Examples
Now it is the duty to reward capitalists, even at the expense of the interests of some of them. ——A compendium of reference materials for the history of modern Chinese thought
The end of success
try fair means before resorting to force - xiān lǐ hòu bīng
The car and the horse are on the verge of each other - chē mǎ fú còu
one 's mind is somewhat unhinged - hún bù shǒu shè