fall into oblivion
Oblivion, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y ā nm ò w ú w é n, which means reputation is buried, no one knows. It comes from the biography of Yanghu in the book of Jin.
Analysis of Idioms
It is unknown, unknown and unknown
Antonym: famous, world-famous, famous
Idiom usage
It has a derogatory meaning
Examples
All the talents and knowledge can be recorded for a long time. Preface to the book of recording ghosts by Zhong Sicheng in Yuan Dynasty
The origin of Idioms
The biography of Yanghu in the book of Jin: "there are so many talented and talented people here, such as me and Qing."! It's all gone, it's sad. "
fall into oblivion
The peach and the plum are self-evident, and they make their own way - táo lǐ bù yán,xià zì chéng háng
bodies of the killed lie everywhere - shā rén yíng yě
engaging one to hold the " knife " -- employ a person to write an essay in one 's name - qiàn rén zhuō dāo
throw away a brick in order to get a gem - pāo zhuān yǐn yù
Bridge is bridge, road is road - qiáo shì qiáo,lù shì lù