Let's go
Niu Tong Ma Zou, a Chinese idiom, means Ni ú t ó NGM ǎ Z ǒ u in pinyin, which used to refer to people of humble status. Source: preface to Bai's Changqing collection.
The origin of Idioms
Yuan Zhen's preface to the collection of Yuan's Changqing in the Tang Dynasty: "however, in the past 20 years, there were books written on the walls of forbidden provinces, temples, and postal posts, and there were no words left by princes, concubines, concubines, and horses."
Word usage
Used as an object or attribute; used in writing. His great festival is Yue Leilei. Although he cultivates his husband and sells his wife, he can be praised. Chen Yan's chronicle of Yuan Poetry: a trip to Qingcheng
Chinese PinYin : niú tóng mǎ zǒu
Let's go
A slow arrow leaves the string. nǔ jiàn lí xián
like a spring dream which vanished without a trace. chūn mèng wú hén
in the morning one doesn 't know what will happen in the evening. zhāo bù lǜ xī