The horse does not get rid of its saddle
Ma bujie'an is a Chinese idiom. Its pinyin is m ǎ B ù Ji ě n, which means that it doesn't stop for a moment. It's from Guo Xiaochuan's song of the Yangtze River: a hundred thousand heroes crossing the river.
The origin of Idioms
Guo Xiaochuan's "song of the Yangtze River - a hundred thousand great masters crossing the Yangtze River" says: "if the horse does not get rid of the saddle, he will continue to fight and liberate the great Jiangnan at one stroke."
Idiom usage
We worked hard day and night and finally conquered the subject.
Analysis of Idioms
The synonyms are incessant
Chinese PinYin : mǎ bù jiě ān
The horse does not get rid of its saddle
put one's heart and soul into. quán xīn quán yì
when the clouds part , one sees the sun. yún kāi wù shì
token granted by the emperor. dān shū tiě quàn