Sacrifice one's body to one's country
Sacrifice one's body for the country, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Ju ā NQ ū x ù NGU ó, meaning to give one's life for the country. From Luoyang Jialan Ji Zhuoguang temple.
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym]: sacrifice one's life for the country, donate one's body for the country [antonym]: be greedy for life and fear death
The origin of Idioms
In the Northern Wei Dynasty, Yang Xuanfu's "Luoyang Jialan Ji · Zhuoguang Temple" said, "when you see righteousness, you forget your family, donate your life and die for your country, and you will never forget when you are loyal."
Idiom usage
To die for one's country. In the second volume of song · Wu Mingshi's new Pinghua of the Five Dynasties · Jin history: "if you are caught, don't sacrifice your body to die for the country."
Sacrifice one's body to one's country
innate knowledge and sense of right and wrong - liáng zhī liáng néng
Send you thousands of miles, you must say goodbye - sòng jūn qiān lǐ,zhōng xū yī bié
store up goods to make a good bargain - tún jī jū qí
valuable things passed on from the past - diǎn zhāng wén wù