be at one 's wit 's end
Qian Lu Ji Gu, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Qi á NL ǘ J ì g ū, which means to compare a limited ability. It's the same as "the skill of Qian donkey". From the story of Dongguo, the way of concubines.
Analysis of Idioms
Qian donkey's skill
The origin of Idioms
"The way of concubines and concubines in Dongguo Ji" written by sun renru of Ming Dynasty: "the rotten rat can be startled, and the donkey in Guizhou can be an orphan."
Idiom usage
Subject predicate type; as subject, object, attributive; refers to no plot.
Chinese PinYin : qián lǘ jì gū
be at one 's wit 's end
would rather break than bend. nìng zhé bù wān
when one sees the saddle he thinks of the horse -- one thing leads to another. jiàn ān sī mǎ