Two-part allegorical sayings of horse racing on the bridge.

Two-part allegorical saying: Jogging on the bridge-there is no way out.

Despair?

Pinyin: z ǒ u tó u wú lê

Description: cast: defection. There is no way out, it is despair. Metaphor situation is extremely difficult, can't find a way out.

Source: Yuan Xiao Xiang Yu, the third fold: "I have nowhere to go, and I know where this Salmon Island is?"

For example, she was really desperate and had to ask her master. ★ Lu Xun's "Blessing of Wandering"

Pinyin code: ztwl

Synonym:? At the end of one's rope, at the end of life

Antonym:? Get what you want, get what you want, get what you want.

Two-part allegorical saying: Lin rushed to Liangshan; Push the car up with your nose.

Lantern riddle: getting on the bridge

Usage: as predicate, attribute and adverbial; In the face of despair

English: Hit a wall everywhere.

Story: At the end of Ming Dynasty, Li Zicheng led an army to fight outside Beijing. Chongzhen summoned eunuch Cao Huachun to discuss countermeasures with several ministers. As the treasury was empty, he asked ministers and wealthy businessmen to provide funds to form an army against the rebels. Ministers were unwilling to contribute, so Chongzhen had to kill his wife and children and then hang himself in Jingshan.