make one 's utmost efforts to fight for one 's point of view
For Chinese idioms, Pinyin is j ù L ǐ L ì zh ē ng, which means to argue or strive for according to reason. From a little history of civilization.
The origin of Idioms
Chapter 38 of Li Baojia's a brief history of civilization in the Qing Dynasty: "my brother is in charge of the affairs of a county, so he should have some ideas. Foreigners, of course, can't afford to be offended, but where they really can't go down, they should also argue with each other. "
Analysis of Idioms
In the near sense, they are able to overcome the public opinions and have a strong sense of reason; in the opposite sense, they are too strong to reason
Idiom usage
It refers to striving for. example let's argue again, and we won't go until we reach our goal! -- Ba Jin's home
make one 's utmost efforts to fight for one 's point of view
reward according to sb.'s deserts - lùn gōng xíng shǎng
The country is easy to change, but the nature is hard to change - jiāng shān yì gǎi,běn xìng nán yí
burn books and bury the literati in pits - fén shū kēng rú
generosity and severity complement each other - kuān měng bìng jì