extreme joy begets sorrow
The Chinese idiom, Pinyin is l è J í ā IL á I, which means that when joy reaches its peak, it will turn to sadness. From leisure Fu.
The origin of Idioms
In Tao Qian's leisure Fu of Jin Dynasty, it is said that "the extreme of sadness and music comes from sorrow, and it finally pushes me to stop singing."
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym]: happy to be sad, happy to be sad, happy to be sad [antonym]: happy to forget to return, happy
Idiom usage
When you are happy to the extreme, you will have a disaster. I don't know where I'm going, but I'm worried. A poem by Du Fu of Tang Dynasty
Chinese PinYin : lè jí āi lái
extreme joy begets sorrow
so pathetic as to move both wise and the dull. āi gǎn wán yàn
marry into sb . 's house in an open , correct manner. míng méi zhèng qǔ
cut the bones between the joints and make use of the momentum to decompose the boneless parts. pī huā dǎo táo
not to do anything more than three times. shì bù guò sān