be at one 's wits ' end
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is zh ì J ì NN é ngsu ǒ, which means that wisdom, method and ability have been exhausted. It comes from historical records, biographies of merchants.
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: Jiang langcai Jin
Idiom usage
Chinese special envoy Lu Zhengxiang, etc. had no choice but to protest and express their opinions to the peace conference. (Chapter 103 of the popular romance of the Republic of China by Cai Dongfan and Xu Xianfu)
The origin of Idioms
"Shi Ji · Huo Zhi liezhuan" said: "this has all the knowledge to ask for the ear, finally does not spare the strength to let the wealth carry on."
Chinese PinYin : zhì jìn néng suǒ
be at one 's wits ' end
To attack the heart and say nothing. gōng xīn è kēng
when one makes a real achievement, he becomes known. shí zhì míng guī
all the men in the boat turned to be enemies. zhōu zhōng dí guó
hard to distinguish good from bad. lán ài nán fēn
turn a piece of poor writing into a literary gem. diǎn tiě chéng jīn
Drown oneself and starve oneself. jǐ nì jǐ jī