Breaking liver and stomach
Broken liver and stomach, is a Chinese idiom, pronunciation is p ò g ā nm í w è I, which means to describe the utmost loyalty. It comes from the book of Jin, Liu congzai Ji.
Analysis of Idioms
It's like a liver full of gall
The origin of Idioms
In the book of Jin, Liu congzai Ji: "but he frequently beheaded the prince by refusing to give a small duty, and imprisoned the general if he said he disobeyed the order. There is no limit to hunting, and there is no need to repair the machine. I have not solved the theft, so I forget to sleep and eat. "
Idiom usage
Used as attributive or adverbial; used in figurative sentences.
Breaking liver and stomach
provide each other with assistance - gòng wéi chún chǐ
layer upon layer of peaks and knolls - céng luán dié zhàng