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An idiom describing someone who is very diligent

Work hard morning and night, work hard, forget about food and sleep, get up when the rooster crows, make up for your weakness with diligence, work tirelessly, work hard at night and cut through walls to steal light, be diligent in your work, burn ointment to follow the sundial, Work hard and forget to eat, hang a beam to stab the buttocks, hang a book from an ox's horn, attack hardships and eat light food, lie down on firewood and taste courage, work day and night, Wei compiled the three skills, God rewards diligence, study hard and practice hard, study hard and ask questions, keep your eyes on, persevere, draw light through the wall, hear the chicken dance, log Police pillow, Yingxue reading, diligence can make up for one's weakness, stimulate the buttocks to read.

1. Work hard [mái tóu kǔ gàn]

Explanation: Work hard and concentrate on it.

From: Modern Lu Xun's "Qiejieting Essays·Have Chinese People Lost Their Self-confidence": "Since ancient times, we have had people who work hard.

2. General Diligence makes up for clumsiness [jiāng qín bǔ zhuō]

Explanation: Make up for clumsiness with diligence

From: Tang Dynasty Bai Juyi's "Twenty-Four Rhymes of Zidao Junzhai": "Save trouble." If there is nothing like tranquility, nothing can make up for clumsiness more than diligence. ”

Translation: It is better to be quiet than to save trouble, and it is better to work hard to make up for your shortcomings

3. Being good at work is worse than working hard [yè jīng yú qín]

Explanation: Industry: study; Jing: mastery; Yu: lies in; Qin: diligence.

From: Han Yu of the Tang Dynasty's "Jin Xue Jie": "Excellence in industry is better than diligence." Yu Xi; action is accomplished by thinking, destroyed by following. ”

Translation: Studying becomes proficient due to hard work, but it is wasted in laughter and play; things succeed due to repeated thinking, but they are destroyed by following the crowd

4. Study hard and practice hard [ qín xué kǔ liàn ]

Explanation: Study hard and train hard

From: "Secrets" by Qin Mu in modern times: "After hearing this, his son no longer dared to take a shortcut by chance. After real hard study and practice, I finally became a calligrapher. ”

5. Keeping one’s eyes [mù bù zhuǎn jīng]

Explanation: Staring motionlessly. Describing concentration.

From: Ming Dynasty ·Volume 11 of Feng Menglong's "Warning Words to the World": "The old woman looked at the little official, her eyes fixed on her, and she shed tears unconsciously. ”