Frustrated
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Ru ì Cu ò w à ngju é, which means to be frustrated and hope shattered. It comes from Shengwu Ji by Wei Yuan of Qing Dynasty.
Idiom explanation
A frustrated hope.
The origin of Idioms
The seventh volume of Shengwu Ji written by Wei Yuan of Qing Dynasty: "the spear in the front, the evil promise in the back, the danger in the back, the foot in the front, the sharp decline in the back, the flame out, the dike blocking water."
Idiom usage
As a predicate or attributive; used of situations.
Chinese PinYin : ruì cuò wàng jué
Frustrated
spring returns to the good earth. chūn huí dà dì
see evidence of people's distress everywhere. mǎn mù chuāng yí
be sated with food and lead an idle life. bǎo shí zhōng rì
try by hook to look for sth.. shàng tiān rù dì
Double axe felling solitary trees. shuāng fǔ fá gū shù