Ashes and ashes
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Hu ī sh ē NF ě ng ǔ, which means to be broken. It refers to the loss of life for some purpose or danger. From the book of hundreds of Li Chang Yan.
The origin of Idioms
Wang Bo of Tang Dynasty wrote in the book of hundreds of Li Chang Yan: "it's better to be a disgraced man to thank my father. How can we talk about the affairs of the world?"
Idiom usage
As predicate, attribute, adverbial and object; used in figurative sentences
Ashes and ashes
desist from military activities and encourage culture and education - yǎn wǔ xiū wén
make promises easily but seldom keep them - qīng nuò guǎ xìn