To swallow up a heavy burden
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is f ù zh òū NGT ū NW ū, which means to endure humiliation and bear heavy burdens. It comes from the origin of Guowen newspaper.
The origin of Idioms
Yan Fu and Xia Zengyou's the origin of Guowen newspaper's seal: a person with lofty ideals, a man with lofty ideals, a man with lofty ideals, a man with lofty ideals, a man with lofty ideals, a man with lofty ideals, a man with lofty ideals, and a man with lofty ideals
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attributive. Example: Jin yuanhaowen's poem "to the Buddhist monk of Xixi": "the door is vulnerable but the sparrow has not been harmed. If the cauldron wants to live fish, what should it do?"
Chinese PinYin : fù zhòng tūn wū
To swallow up a heavy burden
Double axe felling solitary trees. shuāng fǔ fá gū shù