make every attempt to
In Chinese, Pinyin is B ǎ ij ì Qi ā nm ó u, which means to try or exhaust all means. It comes from the theory of sympathizing with businessmen.
Idiom explanation
Try or exhaust all means. The same as "do everything possible".
The origin of Idioms
The second fold of Shang Zhongxian's single whip seizing the sword in Yuan Dynasty: "according to his loyalty, filial piety and true good general, how can he be the death prisoner who is ungrateful and ungrateful? He has done everything possible."
Idiom usage
In Qing Dynasty, Yu Yue's treatise on sympathizing with merchants said, "if you are worried about China's wealth, you must do everything you can to cover it."
Analysis of Idioms
Try every means to do everything possible
make every attempt to
each refused to give in to the other - gè bù xiāng ràng
domestic trouble and foreign invasion - nèi yōu wài huàn
incur a considerable or great expense - suǒ fèi bù zī
discard the old ways of life in favour of the new - gé gù lì xīn
the imaginative power in writing has declined - jiāng láng cái yǎn