Lose everything
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is m ǎ NP á NJI ē sh ū, which means that if you take a wrong step in chess, the whole game will lose. It means that the whole game will fail because of the influence of a certain part. From strategic issues in China's revolutionary war.
The origin of Idioms
Mao Zedong's strategic issues of China's Revolutionary War: "to say" one careless move, lose everything "is to say a move with overall significance, that is, a move that is decisive to the overall situation."
Idiom usage
Used as an object or attribute; used in dealing with affairs. Sometimes if a person makes a careless move, he will lose everything.
Lose everything
hide one 's candle under a bushel - fēng máng bù lù
be superior to the works of the celebrated writers of the contemporary - yā dǎo yuán bái