bear down on one with the weight of mount taishan
Taishan is a word with the pronunciation of t à sh à NY à D à ng, which means Taishan is on the head. Metaphor encounters great pressure and blow. It's from the book of Mupi CI zhengzhuan written by Jia Fuxi of Ming Dynasty: "I gave him a Mount Tai, but I didn't dodge. I killed the one who helped the tyrant. The blood of the one who killed the tyrant was floating in the pestle and blocked the gate of the city."
[example]: when a stick starts, it looks like ~, but when it comes down, it's helpless to raise its hand. The sixth chapter of biography of heroes and heroines by Wen Kang in Qing Dynasty
Grammar: subject predicate; predicate and object; derogatory
Idiom: Mount Tai is the top
Journey to the West chapter 33: the true nature of WaiDao fan
"The great sage is planning to blow it. It turns out that the monster knows how to send mountains, so he can make a magic move mountains and seas on the back of the walker, recite the truth, and send a Xumi mountain in the air to crush the walker. The great sage turned his head and pressed it on his left shoulder and said with a smile, "my son, what kind of heavy body method do you use to suppress my grandson? I'm not afraid of this, but I'm a good choice, but I'm a hard one. " That evil way: "a mountain presses him not to live!" But he recited a mantra and sent an Emei Mountain into the air. The traveler tilted his head and pressed it on his right shoulder. Look, he's carrying two mountains, flying stars to catch up with master! When the devil saw it, he was so scared that he was sweating all over and said, "but he can bear mountains!" He also adjusted his disposition, recited the truth and sent a Mount Tai into the air to suppress the traveler. That great holy power is soft and numb. When it comes to his method of going down Mount Tai, it only makes three corpses and seven orifices red
Chinese PinYin : tài shān yā dǐng
bear down on one with the weight of mount taishan
one must be thorough in exterminating an evil. chú è wù běn
lose one's beyond recognition. miàn mù quán fēi
be conscientious and do one's best. jīng jīng yè yè
I'm not familiar with life. rén shēng miàn bù shú
work very hard regardless of weather. mù yǔ zhì fēng