Osaka walk pill
It's a Chinese idiom. Pinyin is n ì B ǎ NZ ǒ UW á n, which means it's difficult to do things. It is the same as "going against ban". It comes from the biography of Huangfu song in the book of the later Han Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Fan Ye of the Southern Song Dynasty wrote in the biography of Huangfu song in the book of the later Han Dynasty: "if you want to help a difficult Dynasty, carving rotten wood is like walking against the wind, how easy it is!"
Analysis of Idioms
Antonym: Osaka zouman
Idiom usage
To break the water on the plateau, to pay attention to the valley, all the people, such as going to Osaka and taking pills, although they try their best to advance, they will go down again. Sima Guang, Song Dynasty
Chinese PinYin : nì bǎn zǒu wán
Osaka walk pill
brave all possible difficulties. dǎo huǒ fù tāng
The shadow of a son makes a wife. yìn zǐ fēng qī
Break the family for the country. pò jiā wéi guó