be tired out
Exhausted, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is l ì J ì NJ ī NP í, which means very tired, no strength. It comes from Han Yu's on Huaixi affairs in Tang Dynasty.
Idiom explanation
Explanation: to the end; tendons: muscles and bones.
Idioms and allusions
[allusion] although they invaded and plundered at that time, they had little income, but they tried their best and didn't pay for it. Han Yu, Tang Dynasty
[idiom story] during the reign of Emperor Gaozong of the Song Dynasty, Li Gang, the prime minister, was loyal to the country. He always advocated fighting against the Jin Dynasty and seeking peace by cutting off the land. After 70 days, he was demoted. When the Jin soldiers were besieged, he personally directed the battle. His poem "sick cow" laments himself: "plough a thousand mu, a thousand boxes, who will recover from exhaustion? But all living beings will be satisfied, and they will not refuse to lie in the setting sun when they are ill. "
Discrimination of words
He is very tired
Exhaustion
Full of energy
Chinese PinYin : lì jìn jīn pí
be tired out
unprecedented and unrepeatable. guāng qián jué hòu
To ask for help from east to West. dōng tǎo xī zhēng
Cut the flesh and feed the tiger. gē ròu sì hǔ
in one's seventies and eighties. qī lǎo bā shí
Extravagance and extravagance. chǐ chǐ bù xiū