Hard work
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is l á ox ī NJI ā OS ī, which means to describe someone who is worried about something. It's from two poems in memory of the past.
Idiom explanation
Lao: Fei; Jiao: anxious. Describe someone who is worried about something.
The origin of Idioms
In two poems of recalling the past written by Du Fu of Tang Dynasty, the first one is: "empress Zhang is not happy and busy, so that today's society is still in chaos, and he is painstakingly trying to make up for the situation."
Idiom usage
The president of the U.S.A. has spent a lot of time worrying about food and sleeping. The 15th chapter of the popular romance of the Republic of China
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms: think hard, think hard
Chinese PinYin : láo xīn jiāo sī
Hard work
pull shaft of a cart and drop to the rut. pān chē wò zhé
try to stop the passage of time. cháng shéng xì jǐng
speak cautiously and act adroitly. nè yán mǐn xíng
harvesting in autumn and storing of grain in winter. qiū shōu dōng cáng
wear red or white , that is , at weddings or funerals. hóng bái xǐ shì
The emperor is worthy of his painstaking efforts. huáng tiān bù fù kǔ xīn rén