Carving liver and carving Brawn
Diaogan Zhuolu, a Chinese idiom, is di ā og ā nzhu ó L ǚ in pinyin, which means the deliberate tempering of metaphor writing. The same as "carving liver and kidney". From Song Lian's preface to Liu Bingbu's poetry anthology in Ming Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
In Song Lian's preface to Liu Bingbu's poetry anthology in Ming Dynasty, it is said that "if you have good teachers and friends, you can't have a deep experience without carving your liver and brawn and chanting from night to day."
Idiom usage
As predicate, object, attribute; used in writing
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym]: carving liver and kidney, carving liver and kidney, carving heart and kidney
Carving liver and carving Brawn
do one 's utmost to hold one 's own opinion against that of the majority - lì pái zhòng yì
join closely together like the teeth of a comb or the scales of a fish - zhì bǐ lín zhēn