overstrain of body due to diligent study at desk
It is a Chinese idiom, and the Pinyin is "Xun nd ú L á ox í ng", which means the paperwork is tiring and describes the busy business. It's from the inscription of humble chamber.
Idiom explanation
Document: official document.
The origin of Idioms
Liu Yuxi's "humble chamber inscription" in the Tang Dynasty: "there is no disordered ear of silk and bamboo, and there is no form of paperwork."
Idiom usage
Subject predicate; as an object; describes busy business. Example: Liang Shiqiu's "retirement" says: "even though the paperwork is so tedious that the Dragon bell is old and decadent, it's hard to avoid the love of the inn."
Chinese PinYin : àn dú láo xíng
overstrain of body due to diligent study at desk
make a grass knot or champ a ring in order to repay kindness. jié cǎo xián huán
rub smooth one 's whole body from the crown to the heel. mó dǐng fàng zhǒng
cut down annual expenditures in order to enrich the people. jié yòng yù mín