continue to study even in old age
Bai Shou Qiong Jing, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is B á ISH ǒ uqi ó NGJ ī ng, which means that when you are old, you are still studying the classics. It's never too old to learn. It's from "to Yi Bu Cui Jiang".
The origin of Idioms
Han Luo, Tang Dynasty, wrote in his book to Yi Bu Cui Jiang: "Bai Shou Qiong Jing has the secret meaning, and Qingshan is in danger of supporting the aged."
Idiom usage
For example, Renzi was ten years old, and Fu Jiangxi wrote: "Bai shouqiongjing, a poor scholar, is tireless in teaching people. Zongzhi, a scholar, has been honored in the past, but now he will reply." (the biography of Zhang te in the history of the Yuan Dynasty) he wrote a poem in his youth, which is full of wisdom and poverty. Although there are thousands of words in his writing, he has no strategy in his mind. (Chapter 43 of romance of the Three Kingdoms by Luo Guanzhong in Ming Dynasty)
Chinese PinYin : bái shǒu qióng jīng
continue to study even in old age
Take advantage and throw into the well. qǔ xiá tóu jǐng
Sweep away the hole and seize the channel. sǎo xué qín qú