Junsaka salt wagon
Junsaka yanche, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is j ù Nb ǎ NY ú NCH ē, which means capable people are old and hard to bear heavy responsibilities. It comes from the fourth chapter of Chu CE in the Warring States period.
[Pinyin]: J ù Nb ǎ nyanch ē
[source]: "Chu CE 4, Warring States strategy:" the teeth of the horse are coming. He takes the salt cart and goes on the journey. His hooves are bent and his knees are broken. His tail is flat. He drips his juice on the ground. He communicates with Bai Han. He can't go up. Bo Le suffers from it. He gets out of the car and climbs to cry. He takes off his clothes and acts as a curtain. "
[example]: the wind and thunder make people old, and they feel sorry for themselves. Mao Dun's poem titled Gao mang as my portrait
Grammar: subject predicate; predicate and attribute; derogatory
Junsaka salt wagon
apply the carrot and stick judiciously - ēn wēi bìng xíng
ancient trees tower to the skies - gǔ mù cān tiān
hide one 's capacities and hide one 's time - tāo shén huì jì
do the right thing at the right time - yīn shí zhì yí
Melting the past and casting the present - róng gǔ zhù jīn
give instructions after discovering the trace - fā zōng zhǐ shǐ
proceed like a school of fishes , one after the other - yú guàn ér xíng