very rugged road
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is sh ù m ǎ Xu á NCH ē, which means to wrap the feet of the horse and lift the car up the mountain, describes the difficult and dangerous situation of walking on the mountain road. It comes from Guanzi Fengchan written by Guan Zhong in the spring and Autumn period.
Idiom usage
It is difficult and dangerous to walk on the mountain road
Examples
Looking for high clouds, deep valley without scenery, hanging, and then help.
The origin of Idioms
Guanzi Fengchan, written by Guan Zhong in the spring and Autumn period of the Qi Dynasty, said: "Mount BEI'ER is a place where the horse is tied and the cart is suspended."
Idiom explanation
Harness the horse: wrap up the horse's hooves to prevent the horse from slipping; hang the car: hook the car to prevent it from falling off. Wrap up the legs of the horse and lift the car up the hill. Describe the difficult and dangerous situation of mountain road.
Chinese PinYin : shù mǎ xuán chē
very rugged road
peaceful and mild steps -- walking slowly. yōng róng yǎ bù
The ox's head is not the horse's. niú tóu bù duì mǎ miàn
kindness and hatred are clearly distinguished. ēn yuàn fēn míng