Wu que
Wuque, a Chinese idiom, has a Pinyin of Xu á NSH ǒ UW ú Qu è, which means that it's too much to be seen. Take it as the allusion of martyrs dying for their country. It comes from the biography of Wu Zixu in historical records.
The origin of Idioms
Sima Qian's biography of Wu Zixu in historical records in the Western Han Dynasty said, "it's on the east gate of Wu in Wuyan county to see the destruction of Wu by Yue bandits."
Analysis of Idioms
A synonym for "discerning the East Gate", "discerning the Xu gate" and "discerning the Xuan gate"
Idiom usage
Used as an object or attribute; used in writing
Examples
Liang Chenyu's "Huansha Ji · Yunjiang" in Ming Dynasty: "swear to thank Xianling."
Wu que
kindly in appearance but unfathomable at heart - hòu mào shēn wén
face red or pale with too much anxiety - jí chì bái liǎn
hard to distinguish good from bad - lán ài nán fēn