intolerable
In Chinese idioms, Pinyin is l ǐ Su ǒ B ù R ó ng, which means that reason cannot allow. It comes from the biography of Zhuge Liang in the annals of the Three Kingdoms.
The origin of Idioms
Pei Songzhi's notes in the annals of the Three Kingdoms, the annals of Shu and the biography of Zhuge Liang: "qiechong's words with Fufeng Wang show the weakness of Emperor Xuan, and it is not allowed for the son to destroy his father."
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attributive; used of unreasonable things. "As for the tellers, there are many different ways. It's not reasonable for them to do so, but the taiguan didn't ask at the beginning."
intolerable
Difficult to advance but easy to retreat - nan jin yi tui