Exhausted in wealth
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is C á ID ā NL ì Ji é, which means that all money and power are used up. It refers to a life in a dilemma. From the biography of Liu Yi in the book of Jin.
The origin of Idioms
The biography of Liu Yi in the book of Jin states: "since Huan Xuan, he has been defeated in driving away the frown, but the man has not been raised, and the woman has no match. He has fled, and he has never been able to escape from the deep. He has never exhausted his wealth and has never been able to do so."
Idiom usage
As a predicate or attributive, it refers to the predicament of life. From the end of Feng's number, the embers ran and the ugliness became more and more popular. Then he saw the force of the mausoleum, and his resentment and misfortune continued for more than 30 years. --Biography of Baiji in the book of Wei
Chinese PinYin : cái dān lì jié
Exhausted in wealth
lay one 's head on one 's pillow and just drop off to sleep. gāo zhěn ān qǐn