be at one's last gasp
Dying, a Chinese idiom, pronounced y ǎ NY ǎ NY ī x ī, is used to describe the weak breath and approaching death. It also refers to things about to die out, annihilate or destroy. From the annals of the states of the Eastern Zhou Dynasty.
Basic definition
Dying: the appearance of weak breathing. There's only one breath left. It's about death.
Detailed explanation
Dying: the appearance of weak breathing. There's only one breath left. It's about death. < li > < li > [from]: Chapter 87 of the chronicles of the Eastern Zhou Dynasty by Feng Menglong of Ming Dynasty: "King Hui went to ask about the disease, and he saw that the disease was serious and he was dying." < / Li > < li > [example]: he has been beaten to pieces. < / Li > < li > [grammar]: formal; predicate, attribute, complement; derogatory < / Li > < / UL >
example sentence
The candle factory, which was once very popular, is now heavily in debt.
Near antonym
words whose meaning is similar
Half dead, still alive, in danger, dying, dying, dying, dying, drowning, dying.
antonym
Spring and autumn are prosperous, vigorous, lifelike, vigorous, vigorous, thriving, vigorous.
be at one's last gasp
be so frightened that one 's galls burst - xīn jīng dǎn liè
There are many branches and leaves - zhī bù yè fēn