demand everything
The Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y ú Q ǔ y ú Qi ú, originally refers to take from me, ask for (property) from me; later refers to arbitrary demand. It comes from Zuo Zhuan, the seventh year of Duke Fu.
Idiom explanation
To: me.
The origin of Idioms
Zuo Qiuming's "Zuo Zhuan · the seventh year of Fu Gong" in the pre Qin period: only I know women, and women are not tired of patent, and they are not flawed.
Idiom usage
It means to ask at will. Example: after a long time, it has become more and more magnificent, extravagant and extravagant. Qian Qianyi, Qing Dynasty
Chinese PinYin : yú qǔ yú qiú
demand everything
talk till one 's tongue and lips are parched. shé bì chún jiāo
keep modest so as to cultivate one 's moral character. bēi yǐ zì mù
I'm too busy to get along with others. lù lù guǎ hé