be inexhaustible
Chinese idioms, Pinyin is y ò ngzh ī B ù Ji é, meaning unlimited use but not use up. From former Chibi Fu.
Idiom explanation
Exhausted: exhausted.
source
Su Shi, Song Dynasty, wrote in his ode to the former Red Cliff: "only the breeze on the river and the bright moon in the mountains can be heard by the ears, and the color can be seen by the eyes. It is inexhaustible to take it."
Idiom usage
There are many indexes. There is an inexhaustible supply of air everywhere in the sky. It takes no effort to eat until late in the day. Sun Yat Sen's "civil rights doctrine" and song Zhuxi's "Zhu Zi Yu Lei · Mencius · lilouxia": "his source is endless, inexhaustible, for his own use." In Song Dynasty, Xu jingsun's "Shao Bian": "the wind and the moon in the mountains, the sound and the color in the eyes and the ears. Inexhaustible, inexhaustible. "
be inexhaustible
Do what you know you can't do - zhī qí bù kě ér wéi zhī
Avoid their spirit and strike them lazy - bì qí ruì qì,jī qí duò guī
The dragon and the tiger lie down - lóng quán hǔ wò
a correct , high-principled person - duān rén zhèng shì
evoke memories of the past while living in the present - fǔ jīn tòng xī