Jade and stone are all broken
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y ù sh í J ù Su ì, which means that both jade and stone are burned. It comes from Xiwu Jiangxiao's trilogy.
The origin of Idioms
Chen Lin of the Han Dynasty wrote in his "a series of essays calling on Wu generals" that "once the soldiers were released, the jade and stone were all broken. Although they wanted to save them, they could not be saved."
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: jade is destroyed, jade is burned, jade is destroyed
Idiom usage
As predicate, attributive, object
Jade and stone are all broken
overcome all worldly thoughts and enter sainthood - chāo fán rù shèng
Hearing the wind is the rain - tīng jiàn fēng jiù shì yǔ
infer the whole matter after hearing but one point - wén yī zhī shí
Tortoise inscriptions and bird tracks - guī wén niǎo jì
Advance the virtuous and dethrone the sycophant - jìn xián chù nìng