The end comes to the end
At the end of the day, the Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Q ù m ò Gu ī B ě n, which means to make people abandon industry and Commerce and engage in agriculture in order to develop agricultural production. It comes from the book of Han, geography II.
Idiom usage
It refers to the importance of agriculture, the method of drawing a picture in the Ming Dynasty, the new life in the Ming Dynasty, the source in the Tao Dynasty and the end in the Yuan Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
"The letter minister advised the people to farm mulberry, go back to the end, the county to rich."
Idiom explanation
Go: abandon; end: non fundamental, in ancient times called industry and commerce as the last industry; this: fundamental, in ancient times called agriculture as the original industry. To enable the people to abandon industry and Commerce and engage in agriculture in order to develop agricultural production.
The end comes to the end
versed neither in polite letters nor in military arts - bù wén bù wǔ