take hold of bushes and trees to pull oneself up
Pandeng Fuge, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is p ā NT é NGF ù g ě, which means to move forward with Pandeng FuGE. The road is hard. It comes from the third part of Yuan Dynasty's Wu Ming Shi's "secretly living in Chen Cang".
The origin of Idioms
In Yuan Dynasty, Wu Mingshi's "living in the dark in Chen Cang", the third fold: "under the Emei Mountain, climbing the vine to take ge Caiqiao people."
Analysis of Idioms
A synonym for Pandeng
Idiom usage
Kongming came to a stone house with a general sitting upright and a stone tablet beside it. It is the temple of General Ma Yuan of hanfubo. The eighty ninth chapter of romance of the Three Kingdoms by Luo Guanzhong in Ming Dynasty
Chinese PinYin : pān téng fù gě
take hold of bushes and trees to pull oneself up
strike the head on the ground and call on heaven. chuàng dì hū tiān
The east corner is gone, but Sangyu is not late. dōng yú yǐ shì,sāng yú fēi wǎn
a hungry person is not picky and choosy. jī bù zé shí
beyond one 's reach or power to do something. lì yǒu wèi dǎi
good liquor of yang gao -- a kind of good wine. yán gāo měi jiǔ