act with undue haste
In Chinese, Pinyin is C ā ozh ī Gu ò J í, which means to be too impatient in dealing with things and solving problems. It comes from the book of the Han Dynasty.
Notes on Idioms
Exercise: do, engage.
The origin of Idioms
In the book of Han Dynasty, the five elements annals of the middle and lower part of the book of Han Dynasty, it is said that "if you want to defeat the Qin master, you will be in a hurry."
Idiom usage
Subject predicate type; predicate, object; derogatory, used to advise others not to act rashly. Yang Sichang and Gao Qiqian were not angry. They advised him not to act too hastily and to discuss the general plan of the battle slowly. Yao xueyin's Li Zicheng, Volume 1, Chapter 2
Chinese PinYin : cāo zhī guò jí
act with undue haste
utter words that do not hang together. qián yán bù dā hòu yǔ
a single spark can start a prairie fire. xīng huǒ liáo yuán
Listen to the sound with your bones. chuāi gǔ tīng shēng
I don't know if there is a Han Dynasty, what about the Wei and Jin Dynasties. bù zhī yǒu hàn,hé lùn wèi jìn
store up goods to make a good bargain. tún jī jū qí
Drop the rake and get the broom. diū xià pá er nòng sào zhǒu
be scrupulously honest even when there is no one around. bù qī àn shì