go to great extremes
The Chinese idiom, Pinyin is t ǐ NGL ù Z ǒ uxi ǎ n, which means to take risks when things are urgent. From Zuo Zhuan, the 17th year of Wengong.
Idiom usage
As a predicate or attributive; of adventure
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms: desperate, desperate
The origin of Idioms
"The ancients said that "When a deer dies, it doesn't choose the sound (shade)". When a small country is a big country, virtue means the person. If not, it means the deer. If you are desperate, you can't choose. "
Idiom explanation
go to great extremes. Forced to take risks when things are urgent.
Chinese PinYin : tǐng lù zǒu xiǎn
go to great extremes
have a keen insight into matters. dòng zhōng kěn qìng
be cultivated into a good one under the condition of external moral norms. jī shàn chéng dé
There is no end to brown clothes. hè yī bù wán
desist from military activities and encourage culture and education. yǎn bīng xiū wén