to be able to shoulder important tasks
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is f ù zh ò ngsh è Yu ǎ n, which means to focus on the East and west to go a long way. It means to be able to undertake a difficult task. It comes from baopuzi qinqiu by Ge Hong of Jin Dynasty.
Idiom explanation
Explain the long journey from east to west. Metaphor can take on a difficult task. It is the same as "carrying a heavy burden to a great extent".
Idioms and allusions
It comes from the inscription on the Shinto of Li Zhongwu Gong written by Zeng Guofan in the Qing Dynasty: "the chest splits the stream, but it never exports. Heavy burden and pollution, vast as a mountain. Risk comes first, benefit comes second. "
Discrimination of words
Idiom usage: as predicate, object; metaphor can bear arduous task
to be able to shoulder important tasks
stop over wherever there is a house - wàng mén tóu zhǐ
join together in practising fraud - tōng tóng zuò bì
A donkey's lips are not the same as a horse's - lǘ chún bù duì mǎ zuǐ
be cheap and at the same time very good - jià lián wù měi
purify the heart and do away with cares - zhāi xīn dí lǜ
one 's soul flew beyond the skies - hún fēi tiān wài