immortal figures
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Qi ā nqi ū R é NW ù, which means a person who is famous in the future. From the red cliff by Zhao Yi in Qing Dynasty.
Idiom usage
It's used as the subject and object. It's used as an example for a great man to talk about Yan and Zhao, and to hang on to Wu and Yue.
The origin of Idioms
The poem "Chibi" written by Zhao Yi of Qing Dynasty: "people in all ages divide the country into three parts, a hundred battlefields of mountains and rivers."
Idiom explanation
It refers to the people who will come down later.
immortal figures
Four in the evening and three in the morning - mù sì cháo sān
conceal oneself by day and march by night - zhòu fú yè dòng
the beam breaking and the rafter falling -- the country being in a stage of ruin - dòng zhé cuī bēng
take a turn for the better and be out of danger - zhuǎn wēi wéi ān
the nearest to the flames is the first burned - jìn huǒ xiān jiāo