Holding charcoal soup
Holding charcoal soup, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is w à t à NLI ú t à ng, which means holding charcoal and dancing boiling soup. It refers to fearing danger and daring to use life. From Liu Tao.
Idiom usage
Used as an attributive; used of written language
The origin of Idioms
Liu Tao: "the death of Zhou, holding charcoal soup eighteen people." Lu Chu's Shi que Ming in the Jin Dynasty: "so the Party of flowing soup, the disciple of holding charcoal, guard like Fan Li, fight with withered."
Idiom explanation
Hold the blazing charcoal and stir the boiling soup. It refers to fearing no danger and daring to use life.
Holding charcoal soup
take a heavy burden and embark on a long road - rèn zhòng dào yuǎn
resolutely to retire at the height of one 's official career - jí liú yǒng tuì
wind and rain sweeping across a gloomy sky-a grim and grave situation - fēng yǔ rú pán