Heart and soul
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is ǒ UX ī NL ò UG ǔ, which means to spare no effort. It comes from Suiyuan poetry by Yuan Mei of Qing Dynasty.
Idiom usage
To use as a predicate or attributive; refer to
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: nausea and vomiting
The origin of Idioms
The first volume of Yuan Mei's Sui Yuan Shi Hua in the Qing Dynasty: "Li Yishan's Yong Liu says:" the dike is far away, and the meaning follows. " The soul of Liu. In contrast to the words of the Tang Dynasty, "the mountain is far away, but the river runs to the land and wants to follow."
Idiom explanation
It is used to describe painstaking thought and energy.
Heart and soul
there remained but a single one - shuò guǒ jǐn cún
the needle seems to fly and the thread seems to run - fēi zhēn zǒu xiàn
fail to keep proper separation of the sexes in upper-class families - wéi bó bù xiū
the cowherd and the weaving maid lovers separated by the milky way -- husband and wife living apart - niú láng zhī nǚ
seeing that matters are in a bad way - jiàn shì bù miào