general debility
The Chinese idiom, w ǔ L á OQ ī sh ā ng, refers to all kinds of diseases and pathogenic factors. It's from falling mulberry.
The origin of Idioms
In Yuan Dynasty, Liu Tangqing's the second fold of "falling mulberry": "paste Tu Chong Yun:" I can cure five labors and seven injuries. "Fatigue" refers to excessive fatigue, whether it is seeing, lying, sitting, standing, walking, or heart, will, thinking, worry, fatigue, or liver, heart, spleen, lung, kidney all kinds of fatigue, which are called "five fatigue"; the "seven injuries" refers to the "seven emotions injury", and the "seven emotions" refers to joy, anger, worry, thinking, sadness, fear and shock. Like sad, anger hurt liver, sad sad lung, think hurt spleen, panic hurt kidney, is "seven hurt".
Idiom usage
In the age of great harmony, people are the happiest, with no sense of fatigue and injury inside, and the essence of diet, palace, utensils, medicine and road outside. The third chapter of part a of the book of great harmony by Kang Youwei in Qing Dynasty
general debility
Quiet words do not mean to disobey - jìng yán yōng wéi