Do your best
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is j ì nzh ō ngji é L ì, which means to do your best to be loyal. It comes from Bu Ju written by Qu Yuan of Chu in the Warring States period.
Idiom usage
To be loyal to the court, to be loyal to the country, not to be greedy for money, to kill, and to do anything unjust.
The origin of Idioms
Chu Yuan's Bu Ju in the Warring States Period: "since Qu Yuan was released, he could not see him again for three years, and he devoted himself to his wisdom."
Idiom explanation
Exhausted: exhausted. All the strength, all the loyalty.
Do your best
as far apart as heaven and earth - tiān rǎng zhī gé
generous outside but scheming inside - wài kuān nèi shēn
Five accumulation and six acceptance - wǔ jī liù shòu
practise personally what one preaches - gōng xíng shí jiàn