far away from the disaster
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Qu á NSH ē NYU ǎ NH à I, meaning to promote themselves, away from the disaster. It comes from the book of songs, Wang Feng, preface to gentleman Yang.
Idiom explanation
In order to save lives, stay away from disasters and hazards. Far away: far away. Save lives and stay away from disasters and hazards. It is also called "far harm to the whole body", "far disaster to the whole body" and "hidden disaster to the whole body".
The origin of Idioms
In the book of songs, Wang Feng, preface to junzi Yangxu: "Junzi Yangyang, min zhouye. When a gentleman is in disorder, he will be recruited as an official, and his whole life will be far away from harm. " [example] the 60th chapter of the complete biography of Shuoyue written by Qian Cai in Qing Dynasty: "it's better to abandon this official position, hide one's name, and do harm to the whole body. Isn't it beautiful?"
Idiom usage
To act as a predicate, attribute, or object
far away from the disaster
What you say but what you don't do - yǒu kǒu wú xíng
people starved to death are everywhere - è piǎo mǎn dào
eulogize the past at the expense of the present - sòng gǔ fēi jīn