Exhausted
Exhausted, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is j ī NP í L ì J ì n, meaning to describe very tired, no strength. From Jiao Yilin Xun.
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." Han Yu of Tang Dynasty wrote in his treatise on Huaixi affairs: "although it was invaded and plundered at that time, there was little income, but I tried my best and couldn't pay for it."
Idiom usage
It can be used as predicate, object and attribute to describe extreme mental and physical fatigue. The Zhao family is big and small. They are busy day and night. They have already made a mess of people. The first chapter of Li Baojia's officialdom in the Qing Dynasty
Exhausted
words flow from the mouth as from the pen of a master - chū yán chéng zhāng
an affair that was fermented long ago - mì yún bù yǔ