be used up
Exhausted, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is j ī NP í L ì Ji é, meaning to describe very tired, no strength. From Jiao Yilin Xun.
Notes on Idioms
Tendons: muscles and bones; exhausts: ends.
The origin of Idioms
In Jiao's Yilin Xun, written by Jiao Yanshou of the Han Dynasty, it is said that "when a donkey is weak, a steed loses its time, and its strength and labor are exhausted, it is better than a sand dune."
Analysis of Idioms
Exhausted, exhausted, energetic, energetic
Idiom usage
He is very tired. 1. There is wine in the poem by Yuan Zhen of Tang Dynasty: "Jingwei holds the reed to fill the sea, and the dead fish sprays foam to save the pool. The wave of exhaustion is bigger, the fin is burnt, the nail is cracked, and the body is dry. " (2) Lu Xun's new edition of stories: running to the moon: "the horse can only recognize the white Tiancheng, and he has already been exhausted, so he naturally walks more slowly." (3) in Han Yu's statement on Huaixi affairs in the Tang Dynasty, "although it was invaded and plundered at that time, there was little to gain, but I tried my best and couldn't pay for it."
be used up
as easy as burning hair and crushing dry weeds - liǎo fà cuī kū
Returning simplicity to honesty - fǎn pǔ huán chún