helplessly
The Chinese idiom, Pinyin is sh ù sh ǒ UW ú J ì, which means that there is no way to deal with a problem, just like a hand is tied. From the annals of the states of the Eastern Zhou Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
In the book of the Ming Dynasty, biography of famous ministers, Shen Shixing, Fu Weilin of the Qing Dynasty, it is said that "there is a priority. The foreign court can't hear it, and the guards can't enter. Our ministers are at a loss."
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate, object, or attribute. In Ming Dynasty, Feng Menglong and Qing Dynasty, Cai Yuanfang wrote the 108 th chapter of the chronicles of the Eastern Zhou Dynasty: "Hou Sheng was helpless, so he had to persuade Wang Jianying to surrender." According to Pu Songling's strange tales from a lonely studio Gong Xian in Qing Dynasty, "if you go up to the building and see together, Ge Duan will be tied to the lattice; if you want to help it, Ge Xi will not be able to do anything. There are no Taoists. At the end of his tether, he was the king of Lu. "
helplessly
the more honourable , the more humble - sān mìng ér fǔ
sadness manifested on the countenance - yōu xíng yú sè
the determination to win victory and the courage to surmount every difficulty - yú gōng yí shān
confirmed habits are hard to get rid of - jī zhòng nán fǎn