Haggard and disheartened
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is g ǎ ox í nghu ī x ī n, which means weak body and depressed mind. From "answer to the county magistrate of maolumen".
The origin of Idioms
Tang Shunzhi's answer to the county magistrate of lumen in Maoming Dynasty: "the place where lumen is seen in me is almost the same, so I have never seen my husband who is haggard and disheartened!"
Idiom usage
As a predicate or attribute; used in figurative sentences.
Chinese PinYin : gǎo xíng huī xīn
Haggard and disheartened
lay one 's head on one 's pillow and just drop off to sleep. gāo zhěn ān qǐn
what the heart wishes one 's hands accomplish. dé xīn yìng shǒu
One's reputation is distinguished.. zī shēng wàng zhòng
mow the grass and pull out the roots. jiǎn cǎo chú gēn