can hardly move a step
It's a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is C ù Nb ù n á NY í, which means it's difficult to walk. It's also a metaphor for being in a difficult situation. From the Duke of Chu Zhao.
Analysis of Idioms
It's hard to move, it's falling, it's going downhill, it's going downhill, it's going downhill, it's unable to move, it's going downhill every day
The origin of Idioms
The fourth fold of Zheng Tingyu's Chu Zhaogong in Yuan Dynasty: "it's hard to move an inch when I was in a boat." According to the collected works of Dunhuang Bianwen · the scriptures of Vimalakirti Sutra: "I am in trouble because of my fate, and I can't move an inch."
Idiom usage
He is in a difficult situation. The thirty third chapter of a journey to the West written by Wu Chengen of Ming Dynasty: "my second king has some magic skills. He sent three mountains to press him under the mountain, so he can't move."
Chinese PinYin : cùn bù nán yí
can hardly move a step
don 't pursue a beaten enemy. qióng kòu wù zhuī