be fully occupied every day
The Chinese idiom, Pinyin is R ì B ù Xi á J ǐ, which means that there are many things to do and there is not enough time to finish them. It comes from the book of Han Dynasty, the second chapter of Gaodi.
Citation explanation
Leisure: leisure. No: No. There are so many things, there is not enough time. In the Western Han Dynasty, Sima Qian's book of Fengchan in historical records: "although he was ordered but failed to achieve success, his father Liang did not agree with him in virtue, and if he did, he would not be able to give him any time. This is to use hope for immediate things." In the book of the Han Dynasty, Gaodi Ji Xia: "although the days are too busy to give, the rules are far away." "Hanshu. Vol.2. Li Yue Zhi": Hanxing, bringing order out of chaos, too much time to spend. wen Xuan. Ban Gu. Preface to the two capitals: the beginning of the Han Dynasty, too much time to give. "Wang Youjun and Xie Taifu ascended Yecheng together," said Liu Yiqing of the Southern Song Dynasty. Xie Youran thinks that he has lofty ambition. The king said to Xie: "the king of Xia Yuqin has a lot of hands and feet; the king of Wen has a lot of food. Today, there are many bases in the suburbs. It's pleasant for people to work for themselves. It's probably not the right time to talk falsely about the abolition of affairs, or to talk about the importance of things with words. " Feng Menglong, Ming Dynasty, the fifth volume of "warning the world" volume: "accumulating wealth and gathering Valley, the day is too busy to give. It's really a matter of cooking with a few meters, and it's a matter of calling firewood a Cuan. " Chapter 44 of Wu Jingzi's unofficial history of the scholars in Qing Dynasty: "Qingtian is a great sage in the world. He is busy with soldiers, farmers, rites and music. How can he spare time to do this?" The third chapter of Lao Can's Travels: "who knows that one biography is ten, ten biographies are hundred, the official and the curtain take sedan chair to pick up the two ways, and gradually there is a trend of too much time to give."
Idiom usage
Who knows, one pass ten, ten pass hundred, official two way to take sedan chair to pick up the trend gradually. The third chapter of Lao Can's travels by Liu E in Qing Dynasty
Analysis of Idioms
Working hard day and night
The origin of Idioms
In the book of the Han Dynasty, Emperor Gaodi Ji Xia: "although the days are too busy to give, the rules are far away."
Chinese PinYin : rì bù xiá jǐ
be fully occupied every day
One moment at a time, another at a time. cǐ yī shí bǐ yī shí
every house deserves a rank of nobility -- there are wise men everywhere. bǐ wū kě fēng
with an aching head and a broken heart. jí shǒu tòng xīn