Drain one's guts and wash one's liver
Li Dan ZhuoGan, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is l ì D ǎ nzhu ó g ā n, which means "Li Dan ZhuoGan". It's a metaphor for open meeting. He is also very loyal. From the book with Wen Zhengming.
The origin of Idioms
Tang Yin's book with Wen Zhengming in Ming Dynasty: "if you are bold enough to wash your liver, you will not be afraid of your friends. If you are quiet enough, you will not be afraid of ghosts and gods!"
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym]: ledan Pigan, ledan luogan, ledan Kaigan
Idiom usage
As predicate and attribute
Idiom explanation
I'm still full of courage. It's a metaphor for open meeting. He is also very loyal.
Chinese PinYin : lì dǎn zhuó gān
Drain one's guts and wash one's liver
homeless and wandering from place to place. liú lí diān shǔ
words flow from the mouth as from the pen of a master. chū yǔ chéng zhāng
seasonal pathogens , exopathogens. sì shí zhī qì