Sincerely Treat
Pinyin: jié chéng xiāng dài
Explanation: sincerely: to do one's utmost in good faith; treat: to treat. Treat others with all sincerity.
Origin: Tang Wei Zheng, "Remonstrating Emperor Taizong's Ten Thoughts": "When I am in great sorrow, I will treat my subordinates with all sincerity, and when I have gained ambition, I will indulge my feelings and be proud of things."
Example: On the following day, he entered to thank the king of Han, who was ~, both polite and excellent, not the same than that yesterday's situation. ★蔡东藩《前汉演义》第二十六回
近义词:竭诚相见
语法:作谓语、宾语;用于交往
竭全力
拼音:jié jìn quán lì
解释:竭尽:用尽。 To use all one's strength.
Origin: Song Shu - Zong Yue Zhuan (宋书-宗越传):"Executing Qun Gong and He Mai, etc., all of them did their best, so the emperor, by virtue of his claws and teeth, had nothing to fear."
Example: ~ to oppose the first possibility and fight for the second, to oppose the first future and fight for the second. ★Mao Zedong, "On the Coalition Government"
Synonyms: hoarse, exhaustive
Antonyms: to feed one's energy
Syntax: as predicate, gerund; describing to make the utmost effort
Exhausting one's heart and soul
Pinyin: jié xīn jìn yì
Interpretation: exhausting one's heart and soul. To do one's best.
Origin: Three Kingdoms Zhi-Wu Zhi-Zhuge Jin Biography: "Therefore, I did my utmost to do my best and did not dare to do anything wrong."
Doing one's utmost to catch fish
Pinyin: jié zé ér yú
Explanation: zé: pool, lake. Draining a pond to catch fish. It is a metaphor for taking without leaving any room for immediate benefits without long-term planning. It also describes the cruel exploitation of the people by the reactionaries.
Origin: State of War-Wei Lu Buwei, "Lv's Spring and Autumn Annals-Yi Reward": "If you exhaust the pond to catch fish, won't you get it and have no fish next year."
Example: Another erroneous view is to ignore the difficulties of the people and only care about the needs of the government and the army, ~, exorbitant demands. ★Mao Zedong, "Economic and Financial Problems during the Period of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression"
Proximate meaning: kill the chicken to get the eggs, leave no room for error
Antonym: think long term
Grammar: as predicate, object, determiner; refers to not making long-term plans
Exhausted
Pinyin: jīn pí lì jié
Explanation: sinew: sinew and bone; fatigue: Fatigue.
Origin: Tang Yuan Zhen's poem "There is Wine": "The Jingwei's reeds are plugging the overflow of the sea, and the withered fish are spraying foam to save the pools from burnt. Exhausted, the waves are even bigger, and his fins are scorched and his armor is cracked and his body is already dry."
Example: Lu Xun's "New Tales - Running to the Moon": "The horse can only recognize the white field carcasses, and has long been ~, naturally walks more slowly."
Synonyms: exhausted, exhausted
Antonyms: spirited, energetic
Grammar: as predicate, determiner; describing very tired
Doing one's utmost
Pinyin: jìn xīn jié lì
Interpretation: to do one's utmost: to use all one's strength; to do one's utmost: to exhaust oneself. Exhausting one's mind and exerting one's full strength. It describes a person who works very hard.
Origin: Han - Ma Rong, "Zhong Jing - Wu Bei Zhang": "To perform these six things is called favorable, so the teacher has to exhaust his mind, exert his strength and give his life."
Example: 卿当~,务在必退周兵,以捕罪首。
★Ming Xu Zhonglin, "The Enchantment of the Gods", 85th time
Proximate meaning: to do one's utmost, to spare no effort
Antonym: to work perfunctorily, to work in a perfunctory manner
Syntax: as predicate, object, and dative; describing to do something very seriously
Sound hissing and exhaustion
Pinyin: shēng sī lì jié
< p>Explanation: hiss: mute; exhaust: exhausted. The voice is hoarse and exhausted. It describes a person who shouts with all his strength.Origin: Late Qing Literature Notes - Booming Heavenly Thunder: "Beishan cried out, crying mute and exhausted, but his sister-in-law persuaded him to stop."
Example: Because of his anger, although he didn't say a lot of words, he was a bit ~like. ★ 老舍《四世同堂》
Near synonyms: yelling, shouting
Antonyms: silent, calm
Syntax: as predicate, determiner, gerund, complementary; referring to shouting with all one's might
To be inexhaustible, to be inexhaustible
Pinyin: qǔ zhī bù jìn, yòng zhī bù jié
Interpretation: exhaust: exhaust, finish. It is inexhaustible. It describes very rich.
Origin: Song Su Shi (宋-苏轼)《前赤壁赋》:"Only the clear wind on the river and the bright moon in the mountains, which the ear gets and becomes sound, and the eye encounters and becomes color, are not forbidden to be taken, and are not used to the fullest extent."
Example: water resources are not ~, so we should treasure water.
Synonyms: endless, unceasing
Antonyms: empty
Hysteresis: salt in the salt lake
Grammar: as object, determiner, clause; describing a large quantity
exhausted
Pinyin: jīng pí lì jié
Interpretation: exhausted. Exhausted of spirit and strength. Describes very tired.
Source: Song Sima Guang's poem "Sima Wengong Wenji - Volume 2 - Dao Pang Tianjia": "My strength is exhausted, and I have not yet discussed the county officials' rent and tax promotion."
Example: he ~ collapsed on the backrest of the sofa, gasping for breath one by one.
★Ba Jin's Autumn XIV
Synonyms: exhausted, exhausted
Antonyms: invigorated
Syntax: used as a determiner, as a dative; referring to exhaustion of physical strength
Tongue and tide
Pinyin: tāo tāo bù jié
Interpretation: a metaphor for being as continuous as running water.
Origin: Lefu Poetry Collection - Songs for Suburban Temples XII - Songs of Accumulated Goodness: "Drinking the blessings and receiving the blessings, dancing down and singing to welcome them, the torrent is inexhaustible, and the flood is but the water running."
Example: Zhang Jiuling was good at talking, and every time he discussed scriptures and purposes with his guests, he was ~, as if he was walking on water.
Syntax: as a dative or determiner; describing a lot of words
The same mind, the same strength
Pinyin: tóng xīn jié lì
Explanation: meaning to do the best one can with one's heart and soul. The same as "concentrating with one's heart".
Origin: Song Sima Guang, "The Presentation of Exotic Beasts at Jiaotou": "Your Majesty is sincere in your intentions, and I dare not do my utmost with one heart and one mind to carry out the task against Yang."
Example: qing - Chu Renwu "Sui and Tang Yuyi", 95th episode: "All the people are grateful for what they have heard, and are willing to ~, in order to guard this city."
Synonyms: 齊心协力, 同心毕力
Syntax: as predicate, determiner, dative; used in dealing with things
Heart Failure
Pinyin: xīn lì shuāi jié
Explanation: also known as congestive heart failure or cardiac insufficiency. The heart is weakened by disease, overexertion, and blood excretion to the point where the volume of blood excretion cannot meet the needs of organ and tissue metabolism. The main symptoms are dyspnea, wheezing, edema and so on.
Source: Hoda, Muslim Burial, Chapter 8: "'Huh? Heart failure?' Tianxing carried his sister to the hospital bed, his arms were shaking and his lips were trembling, his sister's illness scared him silly, "She's not even eighteen yet, how could ...... she fail?"
Example: He was overworked and died of ~
Syntax: as predicate, determiner, object; mostly used for the body
Using the inexhaustible
Pinyin: yòng zhī bù jié
Interpretation: exhaustion. To take unlimitedly without running out.
Origin: Song Xu Jingsun, "Whistling All Over": "The wind and moon of the rivers and mountains, the sounds and colors of the ears and eyes. Inexhaustible, inexhaustible."
Example: The air in the sky is everywhere, inexhaustible, ~, eaten all day long, without work.
★Sun Yat-sen's "Civil Rights"
Synonyms: inexhaustible
Hypothesis: inexhaustible
Syntax: as predicate, determiner; referring to a large number
......