go to great extremes
The Chinese idiom, Pinyin is t ǐ NGL ù Z ǒ uxi ǎ n, which means to take risks when things are urgent. From Zuo Zhuan, the 17th year of Wengong.
Idiom usage
As a predicate or attributive; of adventure
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms: desperate, desperate
The origin of Idioms
"The ancients said that "When a deer dies, it doesn't choose the sound (shade)". When a small country is a big country, virtue means the person. If not, it means the deer. If you are desperate, you can't choose. "
Idiom explanation
go to great extremes. Forced to take risks when things are urgent.
go to great extremes
be scattered to the four corners of the earth - tiān gè yī fāng
heart startled and gallbladder broken -- extremely frightened - jīng xīn liè dǎn
be fond of eating and averse to work - hào chī lǎn zuò