Sweating
Sweating, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Li ú h à NJI à B è I, which means sweating a lot and soaking the clothes on your back. It also describes the extreme shame and uneasiness. It comes from the collection of the empress of qingsuo by Wu Mingshi of Song Dynasty. The source of the idiom in Song Dynasty's Wumingshi's qingsuo Houji: "every time you play in pairs, you will be sweating in spite of the severe winter."
Chinese PinYin : liú hàn jiā bèi
Sweating
Plant in the morning and reap in the evening. zhāo zhǒng mù hù
there are still repercussions. yú bō wèi píng
one 's love for scholars is equal to one 's thirst for water. ài cái ruò kě
a pleasure which would cost one nothing. huì ér bù fèi
wear furs in winter and coarse clothes in summer. dōng qiú xià gě
Single worry and extreme exhaustion. dān yōu jí cuì