Pull out the mountain
Judingbashan, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is j ǔ D ǐ NGB á sh ā n, which means to be able to lift a big Ding and pull a high mountain, stronger than metaphor. It comes from Lu Jiao, a tale of two martyrs, written by Zhang Siwei of Ming Dynasty.
Idiom explanation
He can lift the tripod and pull the mountain. More powerful than metaphor.
The origin of Idioms
In Zhang Siwei's Lu Jiao, a tale of two martyrs, it is said that "Wang Ji's hegemony will be determined at present, and he will be the strongest in the world."
Idiom usage
Example he led the troops, arranged the troops, and took charge of hundreds of cities in Soochow. (the first discount of Ming Dynasty's Wu Mingshi's "returning home in Splendor"
Pull out the mountain
have a heart as malicious as snakes and scorpions - shé xiē xīn cháng
one 's eyes grow round with delight at the sight of money - jiàn qián yǎn kāi
A scholar prefers death to humiliation - shì kě shā bù kě rǔ
be indecisive when decision is needed - dāng duàn bù duàn