make both ends meet
According to the Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Li à NgR à w é ICH à, which means to determine the limit of expenditure according to the amount of income. It comes from the book of rites, the king system.
Analysis of Idioms
It's not enough to make ends meet
The origin of Idioms
According to Dai Sheng's book of rites, the system of kings in the Western Han Dynasty, "it must be at the age of the year when the tomb dominates the state.". All grains are used in the country The amount of money is the amount of money
Idiom usage
It means to decide the limit of expenditure according to the amount of income. In the book of the Song Dynasty, Emperor Wudi's Ji Zhong: "a man's income is within his means, and the state has a constant code." Biography of sun Yuanzhen in the history of the Ming Dynasty: it is appropriate to enter and go out according to the quantity, and eliminate redundant food and floating expenses. "We depend on our own income to maintain our own survival, so we still have to strictly abide by the principle of living within our means."
Idioms and allusions
During the period of the Three Kingdoms, Cao Cao sent officials to Bashu to contact Liu Zhang, a herdsman of Yizhou. Wei Wei went to Guanzhong. Seeing that the local power was too big, it would affect the interests of Cao's family, so he suggested strengthening control. After Cao Rui succeeded to the throne, he built large-scale buildings and built palaces, which made the people in Guanzhong area hard to live. Wei Wei wrote to Cao Rui, demanding that the limit of expenditure should be determined according to the revenue of the state treasury.
Chinese PinYin : liàng rù wéi chū
make both ends meet
it is hard to change one 's nature. běn xìng nán yí