Hard work and hard work
Lao shixiyuan, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is l á OSH ī x í Yu ǎ n, which mostly refers to adventurous military activities. It comes from Zuo Zhuan, the 32nd year of Duke Fu.
The origin of Idioms
Zuo Qiuming's thirty second year of Duke Fu in Zuozhuan in the pre Qin period: "it's not what I've heard to work hard to attack far away."
Idiom usage
How can we suppress the bandits when they are together? The so-called "subduing the enemy without fighting" is also true. (draft of the history of the Qing Dynasty, biography of Mao Changxi)
Idiom story
During the spring and Autumn period, Qi Zi, a left behind official of Qin State in Zheng State, sent someone to tell Qin Mu Gong that he had been in charge of the defense of the north gate of Zheng State's capital. If he sent troops to sneak attack, he would succeed. Qin Mu Gong did not listen to Uncle Jian's idea that Lao shixiyuan would not succeed. He sent General Meng Mingshi, Xi Qishu and Bai YIC to attack Zheng. As a result, they were ambushed and captured
Hard work and hard work
Break the paper and save the ink - duàn zhǐ yú mò
The slightest error is a thousand miles away - shī zhī háo lí,chà zhī qiān lǐ
each pursues his onward journey - gè bèn qián chéng