pull oneself together
It is a Chinese idiom. Its pinyin is sh ù Q ǐ J í Li á ng, which means to cheer up. It comes from Gui Mao Qiu's reply to Zhu Yuanhui's secretary.
The origin of Idioms
According to the book of GUI Mao Qiu's reply to Zhu Yuanhui's secretary written by Chen Liang of the Song Dynasty, "Bogong Qinfu was not easy to reach, but he was upright and upright. He had a special spirit and set up a backbone. At that time, he only wanted to go back to his heart
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate; used to admonish.
Examples
You used to call di San, but now it's called Dao Chuan, which is called San er. If you can do something, the Tao will increase like Chuan. If you put it down, it will still be di San. Zhai Hao in Qing Dynasty quoted "zhiyuelu" in his popular edition: body
Chinese PinYin : shù qǐ jí liáng
pull oneself together
outmanoeuvre the enemy our glasses of wine. zūn zǔ zhé chōng
Share happiness and difficulties together. yǒu fú tóng xiǎng,yǒu nàn tóng dāng