bitterness ends and happiness begins
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is k ǔ J ì NTI á NL á I, which means that hard days are over and good days come. From the romance of the Western chamber.
The origin of Idioms
The first fold of the fourth book of the romance of the Western chamber by Wang Shifu of Yuan Dynasty: "forget to eat, waste to sleep, comfort and harm. If you don't really endure, how can you hook up this Acacia and make it happy."
Idiom usage
The poor are bullied by the rich, not rich, poor days, poor times. ~, Taisheng is not very good, but Tao is always like this. In the Ming Dynasty, Hu Wenhuan's "selection of Qun Yin Lei · Jin Yin Yin · Ma Po duo Juan".
Chinese PinYin : kǔ jìn tián lái
bitterness ends and happiness begins
not a hair 's breadth in between. jī bù róng fā
Scorching lips and dry tongue. jiāo chún gàn shé
bring a romance to a happy ending. chéng rén zhī měi
Three in a row and five in a row. lián sān kuà wǔ