go to great extremes
Take risks, pronounced t ǐ ng é RZ ǒ uxi ǎ n, is a Chinese word that means to take risks when there is no way to go.
explain
To take a risk when there is no way out. Quite, this work "collar".
source
"The seventeen year of the Duke of Wen in Zuozhuan:" if you are desperate, how can you choose. " Xiao Yingshi of Tang Dynasty wrote a letter to Wei Siye: "if you are desperate, why don't you drag your train?" Gu Yanwu of the Qing Dynasty wrote in the inscription on the cemetery of Kou, a senior official of the Chinese Constitution: "when the public anger is like fire and water, how can we know if we are not excited to take risks in order to cause accidents?" The third act of Guo Moruo's peacock gall: "the common people are desperate because they can't make a living." It is also called "very dangerous". The poem "March 16" written by Huang Jingren in Qing Dynasty: "why am I dangerous? There is no such thing as an accident. "
Chinese PinYin : tǐng ér zǒu xiǎn
go to great extremes
like a crane 's bone and a pine 's appearance. hè gǔ sōng zī
the king and his ministers united all efforts for a common purpose. yuán míng biē yìng
The mouth is full of the constitution. kǒu hán tiān xiàn
be accustomed to normal order and live in favourable circumstances. ān cháng chǔ shùn