meet and send off
Send to work, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is s ò NGW ǎ NGL à ol á I, which means busy with social intercourse. It's the same as "send to welcome". It comes from Chu Ci · Bu Ju.
The origin of Idioms
"Chu Ci · Bu Ju" says: "I'm rather tired, but I'm loyal? Will you send me to work
Analysis of Idioms
Send away and welcome
Idiom usage
It is used as predicate, object and attribute; it describes being busy in social intercourse.
Examples
Zuozhuan. The ninth year of Duke Fu: for the benefit of the public, we know that we are loyal to them; for those who are sent to work and live, we have no guess and we are loyal.
The fourteenth question of the Analects of Confucius: can love be done without pain? How can you be loyal? Kong Anguo notes: if a man has love, he will work for it.
Chinese PinYin : sòng wǎng láo lái
meet and send off
those closely involved cannot see clearly. dāng jú zhě mí