to brave the wind and dew
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is C ā NF ē NGL ù s ù, which means eating in the wind and sleeping in the open. It's hard to travel or work in the field. It's from the book "the first to send to the third son of Yuzi in Chi Shi Yuan".
The origin of Idioms
Su Shi of the Song Dynasty wrote the poem "Jiang Zhiyun first sent to San Yuzi of Chi Shiyuan": "six hundred miles in the open air, the Ming Dynasty drank the water of the Nanjiang river."
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym] wading through mountains and rivers, struggling with hardships and hardships; and [antonym] having a thick seat, leisurely and leisurely
Idiom usage
After he left home, he was on his way, very hard.
Chinese PinYin : cān fēng lù sù
to brave the wind and dew
all neglected tasks are being undertaken. bǎi fèi jù jǔ
click the tongue in admiration. zé zé chēng xiàn
Push the pear to yield the jujube. tuī lí ràng zǎo