firm and unyielding character
Zhengzheng iron bone, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Zhang Zhang ngTi ě g ǔ, which means to compare people's upright and unyielding spirit. It comes from strange slips, the pursuer of beauty
The origin of Idioms
Ke Yan's strange slips, the pursuer of beauty: "the storm blows away only the withered branches and leaves, but leaves behind the iron and steel."
Idiom usage
As an object or attribute; used in figurative sentences. The iron window life didn't polish his iron bone. Yuan Ying's "joys and sorrows: the immortal soul of poetry"
Analysis of Idioms
A firm man
firm and unyielding character
may the hoofs of the unicorn bring you much luck -- may you have many good sons - lín zhǐ chéng xiáng
it is beyond logic and above reason - bù kě sī yì