head broken and bleeding
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is t ó up ò Xu è L í n, which means the head is broken and bleeding. To describe a severe blow or defeat. It's from "awakening the world: Xu Laofu's righteous and indignant marriage".
The origin of Idioms
Feng Menglong of Ming Dynasty wrote "awakening the world with constant words: Xu Laofu's righteous and indignant marriage": "he was often beaten to the skin and the flesh, his head and blood were broken, and there was no idea of repentance, a word of resentment."
Idiom usage
Qu Qiubai's "literary and artistic works sequel · & lt; midnight & gt; and the year of Chinese goods" said: "there are so many customers who have been surrendered, and they are all the world's first-class bullies. Why don't they fight each other so hard?"
head broken and bleeding
one 's power has been transferred into the hands of others - dà quán páng luò
get throught a thing carelessly - cǎo cǎo liǎo shì