The pearls sink into the sea
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is zh ū ch é NC ā NGH ǎ I, which means the Pearl sinks in the sea. It means talent is buried. It's from the story of Yunliu, shichubinxian.
pronunciation
zhūchéncānghǎi
interpretation
Pearls sink in the sea. It means talent is buried.
source
In the Ming Dynasty, I Qiu Rui's "the story of Yunbi · shichubin Xian" (also known as "the story of Yunbi · Shuai Chubin Xian"): "the pearls sink into the sea, the jade and the Jingshan mountains, the sword is dirty, the strange Tao is far away, the Lingtai is slightly moved, and the long fox is a rogue."
The pearls sink into the sea
stragglers and disbanded soldiers - sǎn bīng yóu yǒng
strong enough to pull up mountains and raise tripods - bá shān jǔ dǐng