be at the end of one 's forbearance
Can't bear, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is R ě NW ú K ě R ě n, which means to the point where you can't bear; to the extreme, you can't bear any more; you can't bear any more. It comes from Qing Dynasty's Wumingshi's Officialdom reform.
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym] rise on the stage, hate deeply and [antonym] bear humiliation and swallow one's anger
The origin of Idioms
The fourteenth chapter of the Qing Dynasty's Wu Mingshi's Officialdom reform: "sure enough, those students can't bear it. They have caused the whole class to break up."
Idiom usage
In Chen Shou's Three Kingdoms · Wei Zhi · biography of Sun Li in Jin Dynasty, "Sun Li" sobbed. King Xuan said, "let's stop. Can't you bear it. "Chapter 60 of the romance of the Tang Dynasty:" the princess has a high self-esteem. She can't bear it. She often disobeys her words. " The fourteenth chapter of Qing Dynasty anonymous's Officialdom reform: "sure enough, those students can't bear it. They have made a whole class break up."
be at the end of one 's forbearance
study the past and foretell the future changes - jí wǎng zhī lái
Chicken's voice and goose's fight - jī shēng é dòu