make money with one's capital
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Ji ā NGB ě nqi ú L ì, which means to use capital for profit. From cinnabar Dan.
The origin of Idioms
In Yuan Dynasty, Wu Mingshi's "cinnabar Dan" wedge: "I'm going to buy and sell some small capital on the ground in Nanchang, Jiangxi Province. One is to escape from the disaster, the other is to seek profits from the capital."
Idiom usage
I am also seeking profit from the capital, but it is cost-effective and different from others. The second act of Hong Shen's Fragrant Rice
Analysis of Idioms
Seeking wealth from the capital and making profits from the capital
Chinese PinYin : jiāng běn qiú lì
make money with one's capital
the fleabane growing in the field of hemp becomes straight itself without support. péng shēng má zhōng
Looking north on behalf of the horse. dài mǎ wàng běi
what has been cannot be withdrawn. sì mǎ mò zhuī
hundred generations of root and branches. běn zhī bǒi shì
The Dragon stretches the worm. lóng shēn huò qū