be at the end of one 's forbearance
Can't bear, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is R ě NW ú K ě R ě n, which means to the point where you can't bear; to the extreme, you can't bear any more; you can't bear any more. It comes from Qing Dynasty's Wumingshi's Officialdom reform.
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym] rise on the stage, hate deeply and [antonym] bear humiliation and swallow one's anger
The origin of Idioms
The fourteenth chapter of the Qing Dynasty's Wu Mingshi's Officialdom reform: "sure enough, those students can't bear it. They have caused the whole class to break up."
Idiom usage
In Chen Shou's Three Kingdoms · Wei Zhi · biography of Sun Li in Jin Dynasty, "Sun Li" sobbed. King Xuan said, "let's stop. Can't you bear it. "Chapter 60 of the romance of the Tang Dynasty:" the princess has a high self-esteem. She can't bear it. She often disobeys her words. " The fourteenth chapter of Qing Dynasty anonymous's Officialdom reform: "sure enough, those students can't bear it. They have made a whole class break up."
Chinese PinYin : rěn wú kě rěn
be at the end of one 's forbearance
Drink the gall and taste the blood. yǐn dǎn cháng xuè
summon wind and call for rain. hū fēng huàn yǔ
feel shame before heaven and fellow human beings. kuì tiān zuò rén