patiently attend to a grave problem
Moxibustion with rapid pulse, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is j í m à Ihu à NJI à, which originally refers to the moxibustion method of treating patients with rapid pulse. It refers to dealing with emergencies in a gentle way. It also refers to the deliberate relaxation of the style when writing poems and articles, so as to cause a setback. From the story of heroes and heroines.
Idiom explanation
[explanation] it originally refers to the moxibustion method of relieving the symptoms of pulse in TCM. It also refers to the deliberate relaxation of the style when writing poems and articles, so as to cause a setback.
Idioms and allusions
[source] Chapter 25 of biography of heroes and heroines by Wen Kang of Qing Dynasty: "if you don't take it in a hurry and put Deng Weng's words aside, you should treat him first, for fear that the more you say it, the more left you will get."
[example] Chapter 76 of a dream of Red Mansions by Cao Xueqin in the Qing Dynasty: "if the antithesis is not good, the hands should be closed. The next sentence is to push aside, but it's still moxibustion with a quick pulse. "
Discrimination of words
To deal with an emergency in a relaxed way
Be in a hurry
Patient attends to acute problem
patiently attend to a grave problem
able only to see the little patch of sky above - jǐng dǐ zhī wā
be out of one 's wits with fright - dǎn sàng hún xiāo
the arrow is fitted to the string - jiàn zài xián shàng