It's not going to last
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Ji à Nb à K à zh à ng, which means that the newly emerged bad things can not be allowed to develop. It comes from the Song Dynasty Zhoumi's "the wild language of the east of Qi · the holy politics of Xiaozong".
Idiom explanation
It refers to a newly emerged bad thing that cannot be allowed to grow.
The origin of Idioms
Song Zhoumi's "qidongyeyu xiaozongshengzheng" said: "Han Yu was once a governor of Qing Dynasty, and should have been a member of the Communist Party of China. She dared to make false statements, and encouraged the public to listen to them. She could not be long enough, and could be sent to live in Tanzhou."
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: to guard against adversity.
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate; used to admonish. example greedy, can not grow. Liu Ruoyu of Ming Dynasty wrote "zuozhongzhi of Liao".
It's not going to last
The death of the first morning dew - kè xiān zhāo lù
blow the fire by making use of the wind - yīn fēng chuī huǒ