have a niche in history
It's a Chinese idiom. Pinyin is Q ī ngsh ǐ Chu í m í ng, which means to keep a name in history. It comes from the ten poems of the mountain dwellers in accordance with rhyme.
Idiom explanation
Qing History: Qing refers to bamboo slips. In ancient times, bamboo slips were used to record events, so they were called historical records. Chui: it goes on. It means to remain famous and immortal in history.
The origin of Idioms
Li Xian of the Tang Dynasty used the eighth poem of "Ten Poems of mountain dwelling in accordance with rhyme" to say: "he has a stable reputation in history, and he has been stagnant since he was a sage."
Idiom usage
Example: Chapter 36 of Ming Fang Ruhao's the true history of Zen: "in the picture above, we should be loyal to our country, cultivate our morality and respect our scholars, and train our army and love our people. You are well-known and well-off from the beginning to the end, in order to be immortal in history. "
have a niche in history
Managing the great cause of the country - jīng guó dà yè
versed neither in polite letters nor in military arts - bù wén bù wǔ