Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional festivals - What are the idioms of hard work

What are the idioms of hard work

hard-working,

hard-earned,

hard-earned,

hard-earned,

hard-earned,

hard-earned,

hard-earned,

hard-earned,

hungry,

wicker,

wicked,

hard-earned,

hard-earned,

tired of saddle and horse labor Refers to To be tired after a long journey or battle.

Origin: Ming Shi Nai-an, "Water Margin" (水浒传)第二回:"Truthfully, I won't hide it from you, Mr. Taigong: my mother was tired of her saddle and horse, and last night she was sick with heartache."

Saddle Horse Tiredness Refers to being tired after a long journey or battle.

Origin: Yuan Guan Hanqing (关汉卿)《窦娥冤》第四折:"Unconsciously, I felt a drowsiness coming up, all because I am old and tired of saddle-horse fatigue."

Saddle and horse laboring describes a tiring journey. It's the same as "toiling in the saddle and horse".

The Labor of Paperwork Paperwork: official documents. The labor of handling official documents.

Origin: Liu Yuxi's "Inscription on the Ugly Room" (陋室铭), Tang Dynasty: "There are no silk and bamboo messing up the ears, and there is no paperwork toiling."

The "Hundred Sheds and Heavy Cocoons" describes the hard work of traveling a long distance.

Origin: "Strategies of the Warring States - Song Ce": "Gongshu Pan set up an opportunity for Chu to attack Song. When Mozi heard about it, he went to see Gongbopan with a heavy cocoon."

Preparing for hard work Preparation: all, all. Taste: experience. Suffer all the hardships.

Origin: Zuo Zhuan (左传-Xi Gong 28): "Dangerous obstacles and difficulties are ready to be tasted." Tang - Han Yu "Shunzong real record" Volume 1: the upper often personally bow and vector, leading the army after the first guide guard, ready to taste the pain."

No Resignation of Labor and Hardship Resignation: to put off; Labor and Hardship: toil and toil.

To describe a person who is not afraid of suffering and has strong perseverance.

Origin: Tang Niu Su, "Ji Wen - Wu Baoan": "For today's matter, please don't spare any laborious effort."

Fortune sick: exhausted; sick: overworked. Money was exhausted; the people were exhausted.

Origin: Tang Dynasty, Li Hua, "Essay on Hanging Ancient Battlefields": "Han poured out the whole world, and the wealth was sick."

Dining and sleeping in the wind Eating in the wind and sleeping in the open air. It describes the hard work of traveling or working in the field.

Origin: Song Su Shi's poem "I'm going to Yunxian to send Chi Shiyuan Sanjuzi": "I'll sleep in the open air and eat in the wind for 600 miles, and tomorrow I'll drink my horse in the water of the Nanjiang River."

Meal: eat; Mu: wash. Fill your stomach with wind and wash your head with rain. It describes the hardship of traveling or living in the wilderness.

Origin: Ming Xu Sanjian (徐三阶)《节侠记-忠忤》:""Who knows that this is a habitual orpiment, a habitual wildness, but do not remember to eat the wind and bathe in the rain of the former emperor's business more hard, to do a abandonment of the right and tend to evil no advocacy."

Dining in the wind and snow describes the hard life in the field.

Origin: Ming Zhang Jing (张景)《飞丸记-月下伤怀》:"One of the pains of the masters and mothers is to eat the wind and eat the snow; the other is the pain of the aunts and mothers, who have to die for their own sake."

Dining in the wind and snow describes the hard life in the field.

Origin: He Yi (1958 Children's Literature Anthology) Preface: "The work enthusiastically glorifies the hard labor of these builders who move mountains and fill valleys, who eat the wind and eat the snow, and their infinite loyalty to the cause of socialist construction in the motherland."

Dining in the wind and sleeping in the grass describes the hardship of traveling or living in the field.

Origin: "Ancient and Modern Novels - Li Xiuqing's Righteousness to the Yellow Chaste Lady": "Mulan pitied her father's illness, pretended to be a brave woman, and served on behalf of her father....... meals, wind, sleep, grass, and suffered a hundred hardships."

Meals, wind, sleeps and dew describes the hardship of traveling or living in the wild.

Origin: Yuan-Yang Siam, "Journey to the West", book five, out of the twentieth: "The master's strength is many, meals, wind, sleep and dew busy casting scurrying, night clothes and sunset food without fling break, subjected to the drive of a million ends."

Dining, sleeping and sleeping describes the laboriousness of the journey.

Source: Ming Menglong's "Hanging Branches - Farewell": "Even if you run a thousand times more profit, it is not as good as having peace and relaxation at home. I'm not as happy as I am at home. I've had a long journey, and I'm not as happy as I am at home."

Dining in the wind and sleeping in the rain describes the hardship of traveling or living in the field.

Origin: Qing Dynasty - Xu Simei, "Thanking Li He's Mother for Her Birthday in Qingyuan County and Requesting for Recovery of Lost Silver": "After parting, I have spent the night in the wind and the rain, and I have been singing about the difficulty of traveling. And the grass slanting sun, and then come to the lonely hall, sighing to myself spring light ninety, not a laborer."

Dining in the wind and drinking in the rain describes the hardship of traveling or living in the wilderness.

Origin: Ming Wang Shouren's "Dizhi Travel Essay": "Dining in the wind and drinking the dew, there is no hunger."

Miserable: painstakingly; Management: planning. To manage and plan painstakingly with great effort. Later, it refers to engaging in an endeavor under difficult circumstances.

Origin: Tang Du Fu, "Danqing Quotes for General Cao Ba": "The edict says that the general is pointing at the silken veil, and that he means to make the craftsmen operate in a miserable way."

Walking in the grass, sleeping in the open air. It describes the hardship and haste of those who travel long distances.

Origin: The Book of Jin - Xie Xuan's Biography: "Hearing the crane's cry, they all thought that the king's division had arrived, and they traveled in the weeds and slept in the open air, relying on starvation and freezing, and the dead were seventeen or eighteen."

Long-distance trekking Trekking: over mountains and mountains, crossing water and rivers. Refers to a long distance over mountains and water. It describes a long and arduous journey.

Origin: qing-qian cai 《说岳全传》第六十六回:"Mrs. Yue said: '...... how dare I labor sister long distance trekking, it is difficult to follow orders.'"

The car and the horse are tired. The car is dangerous and the horse is tired. It is the same as "the car is in danger and the horse is tired".

The idiom of "the car is bored and the horse is dead" describes the journey as a tiring one.

Origin: Ming Wang Daokun, "The Sorrow of Luoshui": "The sun is slackening in the west, the Yellow River is passing in the east, the carts are tired of the horses, and it is not possible to drive forward, so I can't help but stay here for a night, which is more or less a good thing."

Morning Rising and Night Sleeping Rising: rising. Rise early and sleep late. The word "sleep" is used to describe hard work and diligence.

Originality: "Three Kingdoms Zhi-Wu Shu-Wei Yao Biography": "Therefore, I am reluctant to fine-tune my work, and I will not rest in peace when I rise in the morning and sleep at night, and I will not be tired by the years and months, and I will be tired by the day."

Dressed in the moon and stars, with the stars on his body and the moon on his head. It describes a person who goes out early in the morning and returns late at night and works hard, or a person who rushes day and night and has a hard journey.

Origin: Yuan-Wu Ming's "The Injustice and the Debtor" (冤家债主)第一的:"This big child is clad in the stars and the moon, and rises early and sleeps late."

Turning over mountains and mountains Turning over: over; crossing: over; ridge: mountains. Going over quite a few hills. Describe the hard work of fieldwork or traveling.

Origin: Yao Xueyin, Li Zicheng, Volume 1, Chapter 6: "His legs are good, and as long as his stomach is full of flesh, he will go over the mountains and ridges, just like the young men."

D鲂鱼red tail 鲂鱼redred: red color. It describes a person who is overburdened with hardship and labor.

Origin: "Poetry - Zhou Nan - Ru Tomb": "Bombs are red tailed, and the royal family is like a ruin." Mao Zhuan: "Red, red also; fish labor is tail red." Zhu Xi: "The tail of the pomfrets is white and now red, then the labor is very much."

Wind and Dew Eating in the wind and sleeping in the open air. It describes the hard work of traveling or working in the field.

Origin: Song Su Shi's poem "Sending Chi Shiyuan Sanjuzi to Yunxian": "I will sleep in the open air and eat in the wind for 600 miles, and tomorrow I will drink the water of the Nanjiang River."

Wind and Dust Bok Bok: hard and busy.

To describe the way you work hard and busy on a journey.

Origin: Ming Jin Yudong, "Poems of Jin Hechong - Two Songs of the Lord of Jingyuan, Korea, Inviting to a Banquet at the Ambiguous Spring (I)": "The wind and the dust are all over the place, and I cherish my years, and I choose to travel with the Emperor's son."

Wind, Dust and Dusty Servant: refers to traveling, containing the meaning of hard work; Servant: the appearance of being tired of traveling. It describes a busy and tiring journey.

Origin: Yuan-Xiang Zhongxian's "Liu Yi Chuan Shu": "You Suo is a deceased person who traveled a long way in the wind and dust."

Hanging polygonum to console the sick Polygonum: a bitter water plant. In spite of hard work, it is used to console the sick. In olden times, it was a metaphor for the monarch to pacify the army and the people, and to share the people's suffering.

Originally from: Three Kingdoms Zhi-Shu Shu-Xianzhu (《三国志-蜀书-先主传》), quoted by Pei Songzhi in his commentary, "To see what it is that binds people together, is it not just to throw in the mash to soothe the cold, or to ask for illnesses with polygonum?"

To endure hardship describes to endure hard work or eat all the hard work.

This is the same as "toil and suffering".

Originality: "The businessman, even in doubt, is not a proper son of man, so he can only endure hardship, and he is remorseful and frustrated, and there is no way to deal with it."

Containing Xin Ru Bitter Xin: spicy; Ru: eat.

To describe enduring hard work or eating all the hard work.

Origin: Song Su Shi, "Records of Zhonghe Shengxiang Yuan": "Nothing is too much, and Ru Bitter contains hard work, and it is more than a hundred million million lifetimes before it comes to fruition."

Cold Plowing and Hot Cultivation A general term for hard work in farming.

Origin: Confucius' Family Words - Qu Jie Xie (《孔子家语-屈节解》):"The people ploughed and plowed in cold and hot water, and were once deprived of food."

Sweating profusely describes extreme tension or exertion.

Origin: Lu Xun (鲁迅)《彷徨-伤逝》:""What's more, she was sweating so profusely all day long that her short hair was sticking to her forehead; and her hands were just so rough."

Constrained and sickened by overwork due to long hours of work. The same as "toil into illness".

Origin: The Sixth Ninth Episode of The Records of the Warring States of the Eastern Zhou Dynasty: "Gongsun Gusheng became ill from overwork and could not rise from his bed; the city ran out of food, and half of the people died of starvation; and the defenders were so exhausted that they were unable to defend themselves against the enemy."

Accumulated Labor Becomes Sick Accumulated Labor: prolonged overwork; Sickness: disease. Due to long-term work and overwork, he became ill.

Origin: "Xunzi - The King's System": "He accumulates labor on a daily basis, and I accumulate anonymity on a daily basis." Ming-冯梦龙《东周列国志》第六十九回:"Gongsun 归生积劳成病,卧不能起,城中食尽,饿死者居半,守者疲困,不能御敌。"

Exhaustion: exhausted. The spirit and strength are exhausted. Describe very tired.

Origin: Song Sima Guang, "Sima Wengong Wenji - Volume 2 - Dao Pang Tianjia": "The exhausted muscles are not in the stomach, and I have not yet discussed the county officials' rent and tax promotion."

Exhaustion: Exhaustion of spirit, exhaustion of energy. It describes extreme mental and physical fatigue.

Origin: Han Jiao Yanshou (焦延寿), "Jiao's I-Lin - Xun" (巽): "The lame donkey is not talented, the steed loses its time, and the sinews are exhausted, and it strikes the sand dunes." Tang - Han Yu, "On the Matters of Huaixi": "Though they may invade and plunder from time to time and make small gains, their strength is exhausted and they do not pay for their expenses."

Exhaustion Burnout Burnout: tiredness, exhaustion.

Total exhaustion: tiredness, exhaustion.

Origin: Qing Dynasty - Li Baojia, "The Present Condition of Officialdom", 36th episode: "Turbulence Producer has long been exhausted by him. Once I thought of Aunt Jiu's bad temper, I couldn't help but hate and curse twice; once I thought of their kindness, I couldn't help but shed a tear in private."

Labors and pains Refers to labor that is so heavy that it fatigues and pains the muscles and bones.

Laos: fatigue, hard work; divisions, congregations: armies; move: to move out, to mobilize. Originally, it refers to mobilizing a large number of troops. Now it means to mobilize a lot of manpower.

Origin: Ming Xu Zhonglin, "The Enchantment of the Gods", 81: "Elder brother, there is no need to labor, he will naturally do his best, but also let the others know that we are infinite in our wonders. --- Not moving, so that the Zhou soldiers more than 600,000 people naturally extinct."

Laboring the form and suffering the mind Physical fatigue and mental sleepiness.

Origin: Lu Xun, "New Tales - Non-Attacks": "To labor the shape of one's body and mind, to help those in danger, is something of a bitch, which grown-ups don't take."

The Polygonum Worm Forgets Sin The worm that is used to eating polygonum (a kind of grass with a spicy flavor) no longer feels that polygonum is spicy. It is a metaphor for a person who will go to great lengths for what he likes.

Origin: "Selected Writings - Wang Ch'ung (Seven Sorrows)": "The polygonum worm does not know the pungency, so don't consult with me when you go." Jin - Zuo Si, "Wei Du Fu": "Learn the Xin of polygonum, and play with the valley of going and coming."

Eating in the open air and lodging in the wind. It describes a difficult journey.

Origin: Cai Dongfan (蔡东藩《清史通俗演义》第33回):"They ate in the open air and lodged in the wind along the way, and when they arrived at the floodplain, they were stationed there for several months."

Sleeping in the open and eating in the wind. It describes the hard life of traveling.

Origin: Song Su Shi's poem "Sending Chi Shiyuan San Yuzi to Yunxian": "I will sleep in the open air and eat in the wind for 600 miles, and drink the water of the Nanjiang River in the morning."

Busy and busy describes a person who has a lot of work to do and works hard.

Origin: Qing Dynasty - Cao Xueqin "Dream of Red Mansions", 53rd time: "Let's talk about Jia Zhen's side, opened the ancestral shrine, cleaned up, packed up the offerings, invited the god, and cleaned up the upper room, in order to prepare for the hanging offerings of the true image. At this time Rongning two houses inside and outside up and down, are busy."

蒙袂辑屦 袂:袖子;輯:拖着不使脱落;屦:鞋。 Covering my face with my sleeve and dragging my shoes on my feet. It describes a very sleepy look.

Origin: Li Ji (礼记-檀弓下):"Some hungry man came in a hurry with his sleeves covered and his sandals clasped."

Moistening with dew and dipping in frost describes a person who has experienced the hard work of frost and dew.

Moistened with rain and frosted with frost. It describes going through a lot of hard work.

Moistening with rain and combing with wind describes a person who is often out in the open, working hard without avoiding the wind and rain.

The same as "to be bathed in rain and combed with wind".

Moistening with rain and combing with wind, the wind combs the hair and the rain washes the head. It describes a person who is always on the go without shelter from the wind and rain.

Origin: Zhuangzi - The World: "Showering with very rain, combing with the wind."

Curtain Heaven and Seat Earth Make the sky a curtain and the earth a seat. Originally, it describes an open mind. Now it describes the hard life in the field.

Origin: Liu Ling, "Ode to Wine and Virtue", Jin: "The sky is a curtain and the ground is a seat, and I am as free as I want to be."

Draped in stars and wearing the moon. It describes the hard work of running around all night or going out early and coming back late.

Origin: Yuan-Wu Ming's "The Injustice Debtor" (冤家债主)第一的:"This big child wears the stars and the moon, and rises early and sleeps late."

Servant: the appearance of being tired of traveling; wind and dust: refers to traveling, containing the meaning of hard work. It describes a busy and tiring journey.

Origin: Yuan-Xiang Zhongxian, "Liu Yi Chuan Shu": "You are a deceased person who has traveled a long way and is in the wind and dust." 清-吴趼人《痛史》第八回:"Three people chose an inn to stay, all the way to the dusty, to this point, can not help but rest earlier."

Pricing: laboring.

Priced for: to take care of and nurture.

Origin: Yuan Shi - Consort Biography I: "Qin for the first Empress Dowager, the long-standing Ming pots, Kesi Huiyin, assisting the previous dynasty, there is the reality of respect and thrift and frugality, the birth of a tiny quality, there is the idea of charging for the Gu Fu."

The people are tired The centaurs are tired. Describe the journey as tiring.

Origin: Ming Shi Nai-an (施耐庵)《水浒全传》第七十七回:"The horses and horses of the three armies have no energy, and the men are tired."

The day care of ten thousand chances Manage: to deal with, to handle; ten thousand chances: all kinds of affairs. It describes a busy government and hard work.

Origin: Shangshu - Gaotao Muo (尚书-皋陶谟):"Conscientious and conscientious, he takes care of ten thousand chances in a day and two days." Han Shu - Hundred Officials and Ministers Table: "Xiangguo and Chancellor, all Qin officials, with gold seals and purple ribbons, are in charge of all the opportunities for the Chancellor of Heaven's assistants."

There are ten thousand opportunities in a day, describing a busy government and hard work.

The name of the minister of Qin is "日有万机" (日有万机) which means that the minister of Qin is in charge of all affairs.

Ru苦含辛 辛:辣;茹:吃。

Origin: Song Su Shi, "Records of Zhonghe Shengxiang Yuan": "Doing nothing, suffering hardship, and being more than a hundred thousand million lifetimes before becoming a man."

Body and mind intermingle with sickness Intermingle: together, at the same time; Sickness: sleepiness. Both body and mind are sleepy.

Origin: Lu Xun, "Just a Collection - A Reply to Mr. Youheng": "If I keep on fighting, I may become 'sick in body and mind'."

Water Lodging and Wind Meal Water lodging and wind picnic meal. It describes the hard life on the journey.

Lodging in the water and eating in the wind describes the hardship of traveling or living in the wilderness.

The same as "宿水餐风".

The word "dine" describes the hardship of traveling or living in the wilderness.

Dragging men with daughters, leading men and daughters. It describes a hard journey or a difficult livelihood.

Snuggle dry and wet describes a mother's hard work in bringing up her young child.

Origin: Yuan-Wu Ming's "Frozen Su Qin" (冻结苏秦)第二折:"And let's not talk about the 10th month of pregnancy, but only from a young age, when he was wet and dry, and a few breaths of air lifted him up to such a large size, it was just like a swallow taking a bite out of his food."

Simmering dry and avoiding wet is an expression of the hard work of raising a child.

Simmering in the dry and avoiding the wet is a great way of saying that it is hard to bring up a child.

To make a dowry for someone else The original meaning is that the daughter of a poor family has no money to buy a dowry, but she works hard every year to make a dowry for someone else by piercing the countryside with gold thread. It is a metaphor for working hard for others.

Source: Tang Dynasty, Qin Taoyu's poem "Poor Daughters": "Bitterly pressing gold thread every year to make dowry clothes for others."

Matting on the ground with the sky as a curtain. It refers to lying on the ground in the open air.

Bringing Men and Daughters Bringing men and daughters. It is often used to describe a hard journey or a difficult livelihood.

Mental and physical exhaustion 交:一齐,同时;瘁:疲劳。 Mentally and physically exhausted.

Origin: Bing Xin, "Returning to the South - Contributing to Mother's Spirit in Heaven": "Can we repay our mother's kindness in the unlikely event that our hearts are exhausted?"

Line sleeps and dozes Described as extremely tired and spiritless.

YiLaoJiuYi (一劳久逸) means to work hard once and get things done so that you can stop working hard later.

Originality: from Han - Yang Xiong "admonishing do not Xu Shan Yu Chaosuo": "thought not a laborers not long anonymous, not temporary fee is not eternal peace, is to endure a million divisions, in order to destroy the beak of the starving tiger ...... and do not regret it." Han - Ban Gu "seal yanran mountain inscription": "This can be said to be a labor and long time, temporary fee and never peace."

YiLaoYongYi YiYi: At ease. The first time you work hard and get things done, you can stop working hard later.

Origin: Han Ban Gu, "Inscription on the Seal of Mount Yanran": "This can be said to be a labor of one and a long time of ease, a temporary fee and no peace forever."

The word "dusty" describes a hard journey.

Origin: Cao Xueqin, Dream of Red Mansions, 16th episode: "Master Guoyu is very happy! I heard yesterday's head of the newspaper horse to report that today's big drive back to the house, slightly prepared a cup of water and wine to dust, I do not know to give the light of the fallacy of the collar?"

The hundred million Xin Wan Bitter Extremely said that the hard work is very much.

Origin: Li Dazhao, "The Great Mourning": "The people have been entrusted with the responsibility of the people, it is only right that they should be responsible for it, and it is not enough to say that they have suffered a hundred million pains."

Rain Turban and Wind Hat A turban and hat to protect oneself from the wind and rain. It is often used to refer to the travelers.

Origin: Song - Zhu Dunru, "Feeling the Imperial Favor - Touring □□ Garden Feeling the Old", "The host is good, the guest is covered with a rain scarf and a wind hat." Song - Chen Sanjian "Dreaming of the Jade Man": "The rain scarf and wind hat, who remembers the old traces in the past when I was pursuing my travels."

Rain curtains and clouds describe a spacious and gorgeous pavilion.

Origin: Tang Dynasty - Wang Bo's poem "Tengwang Pavilion": "The daytime building flies in the clouds of Nanpu in the morning, and the vermilion curtain rolls up the rain in the western mountains in the evening." Song - Yang Wugui's "The Case of the Green Jade" lyrics: "Paths open along the lake, rain curtains and cloudy buildings, and fairies reside in the flatlands."

Rain and Sun Drenching Rain and sun exposure. It also describes the hard work in the open air or the journey.

Origin: Yang Shuo, "Three Thousand Miles of Rivers and Mountains," paragraph 1: "[Yao Changgeng] has been exposed to rain and sun for many years, and his face is thicker than a stone."

Rain drenching and sun scorching Scorching: baking. The rain drenches and the sun scorches. Describe the hard work of traveling or field work.

Origin: Tang Han Yu's "Song of the Stone Drums": "The rain drenches and the sun scorches and the wildfire burns, and the ghosts are guarded by Hugh Moss."

Morning Out, Night Return In the morning, I go out in the morning and return in the evening. It means to go out all day long.

Origin: Qing Pu Songling, "Liaozhai Zhiyi (Liaozhai Zhiyi - Promoting Weaving)": "I went out early in the morning and came back at night, carrying a bamboo tube and a copper wire cage, and explored the rocks and holes in the grass, and I did everything I could, and so far there was nothing I could do."

Morning out, evening back Morning out, evening back.

Origin: The Strategies of the Warring States - Qi Ce VI: "When a woman goes out in the morning and comes back in the evening, I lean against the door and look at her."

Scorched Skin and Cracked Feet The skin is scorched in the sun and the feet are frozen and cracked. It describes the hard work of farmers in farming.

Origin: Ming Song Lian, "The Record of the Reading of the River": "The ploughman has the trouble of scorching his skin and cracking his feet, and the peasant girl has the hard work of carrying food to the laborers in the field of mulberry."

Pectus: combing hair; Mu: washing hair. The wind combs the hair and the rain washes the head. It describes a person who often works hard outside in spite of the wind and rain.

Origin: "Zhuangzi - The World": "Showering with very heavy rain, pecting with swift wind."

boat and car laboring boat and car: boat and car, referring to all means of transportation on land and water. The word is used to describe the fatigue and sleepiness of the journey.

Origin: Qian Zhongshu, Siege of the City, Chapter 2: "The two reporters both said, 'Today Dr. Fang is tired and sleepy in his boat and car, and he will come to the house in the morning to listen to the teaching.'"

Front not Ba village, back not store Ba: near. 着: next to. There is no village in front and no inn behind.

To describe a long way to the wilderness, there is no place to rest and stay.

Origin: Ming Shi Nai-an, "Water Margin", 37th time: "The three of them discussed: 'There is no reason to look at the gun and stick, and it's not good for this guy! Now, we have no village in front of us and no store behind us, but it's good to go and stay there.'"