I'm afraid I can't bear it
It is a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Ni è Ju é D ā nd ē ng, which means wearing straw sandals and bamboo hat on the back. A long journey. It's the same as "Jingyi". From Xu Yunyan's preface to poetry.
Idioms and allusions
"Yu Qing, the Minister of Zhijie, is not a lobbyist. When he saw King Zhao Xiaocheng, he gave him a pair of gold and white Bi. Good bye, he was Zhao Shangqing, so he was called Yu Qing. " It means: Yu Qing is a virtuous minister with integrity, not a man who pursues wealth by playing with his tongue. He came all the way wearing straw sandals and carrying rain gear. When he first met King Xiaocheng of Zhao, the king of Zhao gave him two thousand taels of gold and a pair of white Bi. The second time I saw King Zhao Xiaocheng, I appointed him as Shangqing of Zhao state, so people called him Yuqing. Yi, an ancient unit of weight, is a combination of one Yi and twenty Liang.
The origin of Idioms
Zhang Huangyan's preface to Xu Yunyan's poems in the Ming Dynasty: "up to now, Wang Bing of Yanping had been under Jinling City, and Yu Ti had gone alone to Yinghuo mountain. Xu Zi crept to the top of the mountain, and Zhang Huangshan was in the middle of the mountain. "
Analysis of Idioms
A synonym for "Leng" and "Dan"
Idiom usage
For the rest of his life, he lived between the Yangtze River and the Huaihe River, and within the wild rice and reed fields. He had seen little and heard little, and had been cultivated in the wilderness for 30 years. He began to study in all directions, seeking for the exchange of talents from all over the world. Preface to Mr. Zhang Tianjian's 80th birthday by Dai Mingshi in Qing Dynasty
Chinese PinYin : niè juē dān dēng
I'm afraid I can't bear it
wrinkled skin and white hair -- advanced in age. jī pí hè fà
fall because of internal strife. yú làn qǔ wáng