to be able to shoulder important tasks
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is f ù zh ò ngsh è Yu ǎ n, which means to focus on the East and west to go a long way. It means to be able to undertake a difficult task. It comes from baopuzi qinqiu by Ge Hong of Jin Dynasty.
Idiom explanation
Explain the long journey from east to west. Metaphor can take on a difficult task. It is the same as "carrying a heavy burden to a great extent".
Idioms and allusions
It comes from the inscription on the Shinto of Li Zhongwu Gong written by Zeng Guofan in the Qing Dynasty: "the chest splits the stream, but it never exports. Heavy burden and pollution, vast as a mountain. Risk comes first, benefit comes second. "
Discrimination of words
Idiom usage: as predicate, object; metaphor can bear arduous task
Chinese PinYin : fù zhòng shè yuǎn
to be able to shoulder important tasks
Draw a tiger but not a dog. huà hǔ bù chéng fǎn lèi gǒu
an antidote against the disease. duì zhèng xià yào
be fully intellectual and loyal. jié zhì jìn zhōng
thoroughly to remould oneself. chōu tāi huàn gǔ