make painstaking efforts
It is a Chinese idiom with the pronunciation of ǒ UX ī NL ì Xu è, which describes painstaking efforts. It comes from the biography of Li Changji by Li Shangyin of Tang Dynasty.
Idiom grammar
It can be used as predicate, attribute and adverbial. He praised socialism and was welcomed by the masses. Zang Kejia's Lao She is always here without him, there would be no achievements
The origin of Idioms
In the biography of Li Changji written by Li Shangyin of Tang Dynasty, it is said that "if you want to vomit your heart, it's already you." Han Yu's poem "returning to Pengcheng" in Tang Dynasty: "the liver is the paper, the blood is the book."
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym] painstaking and resourceful; antonym] careless and crude
Chinese PinYin : ǒu xīn lì xuè
make painstaking efforts
on both sides of the changjiang river. dà jiāng nán běi