rack one's brains
Chinese idiom, Pinyin for w ā K ō NGX ī ns ī, describes the painstaking, try every means. From Lu Xun's "lacy literature · three ugliness of examination room".
The origin of Idioms
For example, when asked what the thirteen classics was, Wen Tianxiang was from that dynasty. He didn't have to do it all by himself. Once he did it, it was bad. (Lu Xun's lacy Literature: three ugliness in examination room)
Analysis of Idioms
The answer to the riddle: Tian Zhen's "empty" reading "K ō ng" does not read "K ò ng".
Idiom usage
As predicate, adverbial, generally refers to do should not do or do not want to do. In this way, we have to take care of the outside business and find out what to say to deal with aunt Lin's inquiries. After that, he tried to destroy Wen Tianxiang's self-esteem in order to take advantage of the gap to lure him back. They are always trying to come up with ideas to make money. Listen to me. Don't get involved.
rack one's brains
Tongshan collapses in the West and Luozhong responds in the East - tóng shān xī bēnɡ,luò zhōng dōng yìng
pass off the sham as the genuine - yú mù hùn zhēn
bear down on one with the weight of mount taishan - tài shān yā dǐng
reference to a fight among brothers - zhǔ dòu rán qí