leave a good name for a hundred generations
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Li ú f ā NGH ò ush ì, which means that the good name is passed on to future generations. It's from you Hui, a new account of the world.
The origin of Idioms
Liu Yiqing of the Southern Dynasty, Song Dynasty, wrote "you regret" in a new account of the world: "even if you caress your pillow and say that you can't live in the future, you can't live up to the evil."
Idiom usage
We are going to do something that will last forever.
Idiom story
In the Eastern Jin Dynasty, Ma Huanwen, the chief minister, was in charge of the government. He made a lot of contributions to the war. He was in a high position and ambitious. He once lay in bed and said, "you can't live in obscurity." The confidants did not dare to say anything. He sat up from the bed and said, "even if a man can't live forever, he should be infamous for thousands of years."
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym]: immortal [antonym]: infamous forever
leave a good name for a hundred generations
as incompatible as ice and charcoal - bīng tàn bù tóu
stainless in words but foul indeeds - yán qīng xíng zhuó
have no contact with each other - shuǐ huǒ wú jiāo