staunch through trials and tribulations
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Ji ā NK ǔ Zhu ó Ju é, which means that the spirit of perseverance and hard work surpasses the ordinary. It comes from the biography of Guan Ning in the annals of the Three Kingdoms.
The origin of Idioms
"Three Kingdoms · Wei Zhi · Guan Ning Zhuan" said: "excellent virtue, no couple at home." In the biography of Shao Yong in the history of the Song Dynasty, it is said that "learning at the beginning means hard work, no stove in the cold, no fan in the summer, and no banquet at night for several years."
Idiom usage
The spirit of being tough and hardworking is beyond the ordinary. Guo Moruo's "hongboqu: a visit to the Soviet Union, July 23" said: "this kind of typical underground work spirit is very similar to us." Zhu Qi of the Qing Dynasty wrote in the book Ouyang Yongshu's reply to Yin Shilu's reply: "although it made the ancients persevere in their journey, they pushed their hearts, and they looked on the tripod as if they were happy." China has held arduous multilateral talks in order to join the WTO. Of course, compared with genius, clay is not enough, but it is not easy to do. Lu Xun's grave before genius
Analysis of Idioms
It's hard work, hard work, and hard work
Chinese PinYin : jiān kǔ zhuó jué
staunch through trials and tribulations
make a pillow of one 's spear waiting for daybreak. zhěn gē dài dàn
have neither fighting skill nor courage. wú quán wú yǒng
an ant trying to shake a giant tree. pí fú hàn shù