desperate remedies
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is j ì ch ū w ú Li á o, which means the idea comes from helplessness. It comes from Sima Qian's biography of King Wu in historical records in the Western Han Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
According to the biography of Wu Wang Bi in historical records, "Shangfu asked the Wu emissary, and the emissary said to him: '" Now the king began to cheat. He felt that he was more and more anxious to blame. He was afraid that he would be punished. The plan was boring. The only way to do this is to abandon it and change it. "
Idiom usage
Subject predicate type; as object; refers to the idea out of helplessness
Examples
What's the matter! In Ming Dynasty, Lu Shanji's the imperial historian's book
Analysis of Idioms
How can I help you
desperate remedies
wear a sad face a long face with knitted eyebrows - jiāo méi kǔ liǎn
There is no tile on the top and no pin on the bottom - shàng wú piàn wǎ,xià wú chā zhēn zhī dì
the time and fates are against someone - mìng jiǎn shí guāi
Although peony is good, it must be supported by green leaves - mǔ dān suī hǎo,zhōng xū lǜ yè fú chí