steadfast
Lishan Daihe, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is l ì sh ā nd à IH é, which means that the Yellow River is as thin as a strip of clothing, and Mount Tai is as small as a grindstone. It means that any turbulence will never change its mind for a long time. It comes from the chronicle of the meritorious officials of Gaozu in historical records.
Idiom explanation
Li: grindstone; Shan: Taishan; Dai: Yidai; he: Yellow River.
The origin of Idioms
According to the chronology of Gaozu's meritorious officials in historical records, "the oath of nobility says:" let the river be like a belt, Mount Tai be like a Li, the country be Yongning, and love the Miao people. "
Idiom usage
It is a metaphor for a long time. However, Yuan rebelled against Shikai, rebelled against the Republic of China, revived the imperial system, set up the Yellow House banner, and suddenly promoted the thought of separation. There was no agreement that it would never be cold again. (Chapter 58 of the popular romance of the Republic of China by Cai Dongfan and Xu Xianfu)
steadfast
Lions and elephants fight rabbits with all their strength - shī xiàng bó tù,jiē yòng quán lì
the husband to sing and the wife to follow - fū chàng fù suí
high buildings rise from the level ground -- start from scratch - píng dì lóu tái
conceal the true state of affairs from above and below oneself - qī shàng wǎng xià
No village before, no shop behind - qián bù bā cūn,hòu bù zháo diàn