heaven and hell
Heaven and hell, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is ti ā NT á NGD ì y ù, which means that a good man goes to heaven after death, and a wicked man goes to hell after death. Buddhism is used to encourage good and punish evil. Later, it is often used as a metaphor for happiness and misery. From Ding Fubao's Buddhist dictionary.
The origin of Idioms
In the book of Song Dynasty, biography of tianzhujiapili States, "if you want heaven to be good, you should obey righteousness and follow the way; if you are afraid of hell, you should command your body, which one should follow the principle."
Idiom usage
As the subject, object, attribute; used for comparison example ~ door relative, you can choose there is good. The second part of the Yuan Dynasty's Wu Ming Shi's Du Liu Cui
heaven and hell
frank by nature with a ready tongue - kǒu zhí xīn kuài
coarse meals of a farming family - mài fàn dòu gēng
shooting two birds with one stone - yī jǔ liǎng quán
gratitude for the slightest favour received or grudge against the slightest wrong done - sī ēn fà yuàn