The mountain passes through the stone
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is sh ā NLI ù Chu ā NSH í, which means that the water in the mountain can drop through the stone. It means that with determination and perseverance, things can succeed. From Shangshu Jianwu Wang.
Idiom explanation
The dripping water in the mountain can tear through the stone. Metaphor as long as there is determination and perseverance, things can be successful.
The origin of Idioms
Mei Cheng of the Han Dynasty wrote to admonish the king of Wu: "Mount Tai's slip through the stone."
Idiom usage
As an object or attribute; used in figurative sentences.
Chinese PinYin : shān liù chuān shí
The mountain passes through the stone
twelve girls in Dream of the Red Mansion. shí èr jīn chāi
till seas run dry , stones crumble. shí làn jiāng kū
Satirize virtue and recite merits. fěng dé sòng gōng