the mire of misery is boundless
In Chinese, Pinyin is k ǔ h ǎ im á NGM á ng, which means endless suffering. It comes from the seven signatures of Yunji.
The origin of Idioms
Zhang Junfang's "seven signatures of Cloud Collection" in Song Dynasty, Volume 66: "when you see the dust of Nanshan Mountain, it's a hill for years. In a sea of bitterness, life and death become waves. "
Idiom usage
As the subject and object, it refers to endless suffering. It is a sea of suffering that can make you sad. Wang Chu's "Xingxiangzi · persuading Xu laofengshan"
Analysis of Idioms
A sea of bitterness
the mire of misery is boundless
search for an opening for oneself by all possible means - zuān tiān rù dì
To teach others in various ways - xíng shū sè shòu
make no social distinctions in teaching - yǒu jiào wú lèi