be at one 's wits ' end
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is zh ī J ì NN é ngsu ǒ, which means that the wisdom and ability are exhausted. It comes from historical records, biographies of merchants.
Idiom explanation
Metaphor wisdom and ability are exhausted.
Source of entry
According to the biography of goods colonization in historical records, "the farmers, the businessmen and the herdsmen seek wealth and benefit from goods.". This has the knowledge to be able to search the ear, finally does not spare the strength but lets the wealth carry on
be at one 's wits ' end
Nothing is difficult if you put your heart into it - shì shàng wú nán shì,zhǐ pà yǒu xīn rén
put new wine into old bottles - jiù píng zhuāng xīn jiǔ
be crazy about foreign things and obsequious to foreigners - chóng yáng mèi wài
roll up one 's sleeves and raise one 's fists to fight - xuān quán lǒng xiù