terribly fatigued
Tired, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is p í B è IB ù K ā n, meaning tired, describes extreme fatigue and overwork. From the romance of Wu Song.
Analysis of Idioms
Exhausted, exhausted, energetic, energetic
The origin of Idioms
The tenth chapter of Liu Jiaonan's the romance of Wu Song: "as soon as the prisoner gets on the stile stick, he can't sit or lie down, but he's in a tight squeeze and exhausted."
Idiom usage
It has a derogatory meaning. Lin Zexu of the Qing Dynasty published the draft of regulations on banning opium smoking by soldiers in the camp: "the name of a healthy soldier is exhausting, and he is entrusted to investigate private affairs and bribe the public. This kind of long-standing malpractice can be hated." Qiu Gaofeng's "hold the jewel in your hand": on a night without stars and moon, a tramp comes to Haiyan. He is tired and sits down to have a rest. Zweig's the great tragedy lesson 21 and PEP seventh grade volume two unit 5 lesson 21: the snow on the soles of their shoes turns from soft to hard, forming a thick ridge of ice, just like stepping on a triangular nail, they have to stick to their shoes every step, and the piercing cold engulfs their exhausted bodies. The business trip was very tiring. she dragged her tired body and rushed to save the child from the galloping wheel.
terribly fatigued
the turn of fortune after reaching one extreme - bō jí jiāng fù
travel day and night with all possible speed - zhòu yè jiān chéng
step by step one goes as far as a thousand li - kuǐ bù qiān lǐ