Terraced mountain and trestle Valley
Terraced mountain and trestle Valley, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is t ī sh ā nzh à ng ǔ, which means to dig a ladder and build a trestle road to go through high mountains and deep valleys. It comes from the biography of the western regions in the book of the later Han Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Fan Ye of the Southern Song Dynasty wrote in the book of the later Han Dynasty, biography of the western regions: "the way of walking through the sand on terraced mountains and valleys is that the body is hot and the head is painful, and the wind is hard for ghosts. Don't be unprepared to write about the situation and try to find the root."
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or object; used in writing.
Chinese PinYin : tī shān zhàn gǔ
Terraced mountain and trestle Valley
regard one 's ink as if it were gold -- one will not easily paint. xī mò rú jīn