Bow: bending over to express respect and caution; Jiexie: exhaust all the hard work; already: stop. It means to work diligently and do your best until death.
Origin of the idiom: Zhuge Liang, Shu, Three Kingdoms, "The Master's Guide": "I will do my best, and then die."
Examples of the idiom: Brother Chen, the Emperor of He, knew about the encounter, and I will do my best, and then die. Already, I dare not talk about my illness.
Traditional Chinese writing: Ju Bo is exhausted and dead
Phonetic: ㄐㄨㄍㄨㄙㄐㄧㄣˋ ㄘㄨㄟˋ , ㄙㄧˇ ㄦˊ ㄏㄡˋ ㄧ ˇ
Idiom grammar: more formal; used as predicate, attributive, and adverbial; with a complimentary meaning
Common usage: Commonly used idioms
Emotional and color: complimentary idiom
p>Idiom structure: Complex idiom
Era of production: Ancient idiom
English translation: work with utter devotion Other translations:
Idiom riddle: Spring silkworms will not run out of silk until they die, wax torches will turn to ashes and tears will dry up. Note on pronunciation: run out, cannot be pronounced as "jǐn".
Writing notes: When you are tired, you cannot write "cui"; when you are tired, you cannot write "ji" or "si".
Effort is the body of success, and wisdom is the soul of success. The following is what I shared. Take a look with me.
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