I'll take the lead
As a Chinese idiom, D ú sh ǒ uz ū nqi á n in pinyin means "merciless strike". It comes from Li Xiji, a biography of Tang ministers in the history of the new Five Dynasties.
The idiom comes from Li Xiji, a biography of Tang ministers in the history of the new Five Dynasties: "as for poisonous hands and respectful fists, they meet at dusk; as for gold and iron, they trample on Mingcun."
Chinese PinYin : dú shǒu zūn qián
I'll take the lead
Indifference leads to ambition, tranquility leads to ambition. dàn bó yǐ míng zhì,níng jìng yǐ zhì yuǎn
There's nothing wrong with it. guà yī lòu wàn
make up deficiency by funds elsewhere. yí dōng jiù xī
the principle of friendship will not admit of a refusal. yì bù róng cí
embarrassingly short of money. ruǎn náng xiū sè
help each other in adversity. jí bìng xiāng fú
plug one 's ears while stealing a bell. sāi ěr tōu líng