feeble
The Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y ǒ UQ ì w ú L ì, which means to describe weak voice and low spirits; it also describes weak and weak. It comes from Xingshi Hengyan, the appointment of Linzhou in Wu Yamen.
The origin of Idioms
"I don't know that there's another one in the cabin to eat for. I'm still very hungry," says Feng Menglong of Ming Dynasty
Analysis of Idioms
Exhausted, exhausted, full of vigor and vitality
Idiom usage
It is used as predicate and adverbial to describe weakness. example "five pieces of brown rice, three pieces of grain." The gentleman in the rice shop answered them with a smile. Ye Shengtao's more than three and five duels
feeble
The day is dry and the night is alert - zhòu gàn xī tì
If you don't want others to know, don't do it - yù rén wù zhī,mò ruò wù wéi
so full of hatred that each wants to get the other 's head - mào shǒu zhī chóu
a feeling of exaltation upon fulfillment - yáng méi tǔ qì