hesitate to advance
Faltering, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Z ī J ū B ù Qi á n, which means faltering and not daring to move forward. It is used to describe hesitation and timidity. It comes from the book of changes.
Analysis of Idioms
Forward and backward, indecisive, first and second; go forward and never go forward
The origin of Idioms
"The buttock has no skin, and its line is more than the other."
Idiom usage
It has a derogatory meaning. Involuntarily, he got on the Chartered bus and went back to Hongren Li. Looking at his door, he felt a little nervous. (the seventh chapter of Wu Jianren's strange situation in recent ten years in Qing Dynasty) they want to know each other, but they are hesitant. In the preface to sending Li Yuan back to Pangu written by Han Yu of Tang Dynasty, "the foot general further falters, and the mouth general speaks and murmurs."
Chinese PinYin : zī jū bù qián
hesitate to advance
change existing habits and customs. yí fēng píng sú