I can't bear it
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Q ì R ě NSH ē NGT ū n, which means to bear with anger and say nothing. It's a term for a wimp. It comes from "he Han Shan" by Zhang Guobin in Yuan Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
In Yuan Dynasty, the first fold of Zhang Guobin's "he Hanshan" is: "he was a man for a lifetime, but he was lonely and poor for half of his life. He could bear to swallow his anger. When would he repay his kindness?"
Analysis of Idioms
Bear with one's anger
Idiom usage
If he is wronged, he can only fight.
Chinese PinYin : qì rěn shēng tūn
I can't bear it
Words have no branches or leaves. cí wú zhī yè
blow on an instrument or finger a stringed instrument. pǐn zhú tiáo sī