make one 's utmost efforts to fight for one 's point of view
For Chinese idioms, Pinyin is j ù L ǐ L ì zh ē ng, which means to argue or strive for according to reason. From a little history of civilization.
The origin of Idioms
Chapter 38 of Li Baojia's a brief history of civilization in the Qing Dynasty: "my brother is in charge of the affairs of a county, so he should have some ideas. Foreigners, of course, can't afford to be offended, but where they really can't go down, they should also argue with each other. "
Analysis of Idioms
In the near sense, they are able to overcome the public opinions and have a strong sense of reason; in the opposite sense, they are too strong to reason
Idiom usage
It refers to striving for. example let's argue again, and we won't go until we reach our goal! -- Ba Jin's home
Chinese PinYin : jù lǐ lì zhēng
make one 's utmost efforts to fight for one 's point of view
He who goes along the way prospers, but he who goes against virtue perishes. shùn dào zhě chāng,nì dé zhě wáng
Forget to eat and forget to sleep. wàng cān fèi qǐn
the old remembers past times or old acquaintances. lǎo mǎ liàn zhàn