To break through the difficulties
Mo Tu Bu Qian, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is mॸt ū B ù, which originally means that Mo Zhai travels east and West, and goes to other places before the chimney is blackened. Later, it was used as a reference. It's a busy thing, but it's a busy thing. It comes from Dabin opera by Ban Gu in the Eastern Han Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
"It is the rule of sages. Confucius and Xi are not warm, and Mo Tu is not Qian. " ——Ban Gu's Dabin opera in Eastern Han Dynasty
Idiom story
During the Warring States period, Mozi, a great thinker, opposed the war of bullying, called for equality and mutual love, and often traveled to various vassal states to publicize his "non war" proposition. As he ran around, he never had a permanent residence. Ban Gu of the Han Dynasty commented on him as: "Confucius and Xi are not warm, Mo Tu is not Qian."
Idiom usage
He is often too busy to be busy.
Chinese PinYin : mò tū bù qián
To break through the difficulties
the suspicion of being in the melon field and under the plum tree. guā tián zhī xián
lose one's beyond recognition. miàn mù quán fēi
Learning is shallow and talent is scarce. xué qiǎn cái shū