the end of hills and rivers
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is sh ā nqi ó ngshu ǐ Du à n, which means the end of the mountain and the end of the water. It comes from the tablet of God of yuwengong, governor of Yanzhou.
The origin of Idioms
Gengxin of the Northern Zhou Dynasty wrote in the tablet of the divine way of yuwengong, the governor of Yanzhou in Zhou Dynasty: "the streams are towering, the cliffs are dangerous, the mountains and rivers are broken, and the horses are flying across the bridge."
Idiom usage
As predicate, attributive, object; refers to hopelessness.
the end of hills and rivers
in one 's humble position , one 's word does not carry much weight - rén wēi wàng qīng
difficulty is the nurse of greatness - yù rǔ yú chéng
a situation of tripartite confrontation - sān zú dǐng lì