steep
Straight up and down, the Chinese idiom, Pinyin is zh í sh à ngzh í Xi à, which means consistent up and down, and describes steep and straight. It comes from Zhuzi Quanshu.
The origin of Idioms
The fourth volume of Zhu Zi Quan Shu: "everything is divided into two sides, the bottom side, not the bottom side. The bottom is the natural principle, and the non bottom is human desire. It is to keep and not to lose, not to go and not to stay: This is the way to cure one's body. To govern a family is to distinguish the right from the wrong, and to govern a city is to distinguish the evil from the right. This is the way to govern a state and the whole world. "
Idiom usage
In Chapter 67 of the outlaws of the marsh by Shi Naian of Ming Dynasty, there is only a big man walking by the official road, Li Kui ③ It's hard to walk on the stairs.
steep
behead enemy generals and capture their flags - zhǎn jiàng yì qí
a fish leaping over the dragon gate -- have passed a competitive examination - yú shēng lóng mén
With its faintness, make people clear - yǐ qí hūn hūn,shǐ rén zhāo zhāo
have not enough for food and clothing - duǎn chī shǎo chuān