be overwhelmed with joy
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is l è B ù K ě zh ī, which means to be too happy to support. To describe the extreme joy. It comes from the biography of Zhang canzhuan.
The origin of Idioms
Ban Gu, Han Dynasty, wrote in the biography of Zhang canzhuan: "the mulberry has no branches, the wheat has two branches, and Zhang Jun is in charge of politics, so he is very happy."
Idiom story
In the early Eastern Han Dynasty, there was a man named Zhang Kan in Nanyang who was very popular with Liu Xiuqi, Emperor Guangwu of Han Dynasty. In 38 A.D., Zhang Kan was appointed as the prefect of Yuyang County after he defeated the Hun army with Hushi general Du Mao. During his term of office, Zhang Kan was clear about rewards and punishments, and he did what he said. More than ten thousand Hun cavalry were defeated and the people lived and worked in peace and contentment. Then Zhang Kan ordered people to lead the people to cultivate, and more than 8000 hectares of rice fields were produced, making the people in the county rich. Zhang Kan served as the prefect for eight years and won the support of the people. The people of Yuyang wrote songs to praise him. There is a song: "mulberry without branches, wheat with two ears.". Zhang Jun is very happy to be in charge of politics. "
Idiom usage
Xiao Ming got 100 points in the exam. He was very happy. After listening to master Baoyun's words, master LAN Yan was very concerned about how to stop him.
Chinese PinYin : lè bù kě zhī
be overwhelmed with joy
The river is clear and the river is muddy. jīng qīng wèi zhuó
bring glory to one 's parents and become celebrated. xiǎn zǔ yáng míng
Deep-rooted habits are hard to give up.. jī xí nán chú
Cure a sore and gouge out meat. liáo chuāng wān ròu
harm others to benefit oneself. lì jǐ sǔn rén
incomplete parts of ancient scripts. duàn jiǎn yí biān