bear hardship without complaint
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is R è NL á or è NYU à n, which means that we are not afraid of hardship or complaint. It comes from "on salt and iron · Ciquan" and "Han Shu · Shi xianzhuan".
Idiom explanation
Ren: take responsibility and experience. I'm not afraid to bear hardships or complain.
Idiom usage
The old cattle worked hard in the field. Lao She's Camel Xiangzi: "he goes to work all day long, but when he does it, he thinks of it." "This hole washes all kinds of dirty things for the whole city without complaint," says Xing Xinyi's Hello come out
The origin of Idioms
In Huang Kuan's on salt and iron, the right to stab: "if a man eats the power of ten thousand people, he will be worried and let him complain." Shi xianzhuan in the book of Han Dynasty: "sincerity can't satisfy all people with one body, and let the world complain."
Idioms and allusions
On September 26, Zhao Chuan killed Jin linggong in Taoyuan. Zhao Dun has not yet gone out of the mountain boundary of the country. When he heard that linggong was killed, he came back. Dong Hu, the Grand Historian of the state of Jin, recorded: "Zhao Dun killed his monarch." He also took this statement to the court for publication. "It's not like that," Zhao Dun said Dong Hu said, "as a prime minister, you fled but did not leave the country. When you came back, you did not fight against the traitors. Who was it that you did not kill the king?" Zhao Dun said, "ah! The poem says, "I miss my motherland in my heart, but I feel sad for myself." I think that's about me
Chinese PinYin : rèn láo rèn yuàn
bear hardship without complaint
one 's power has been transferred into the hands of others. dà quán páng luò
look for the tip of the branch while give up the trunk of the tree. sǔn běn zhú mò
learn about its taboos on going to a friend 's house. rù mén wèn huì