take a sudden liking to studying
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is zh é Ji é D ú sh ū, which means to change old habits and read angrily. It comes from the biography of Duan 颎 in the later Han Dynasty.
Idiom explanation
Compromise: change your past interests and behaviors.
The origin of Idioms
The biography of Duan Yu in the book of the later Han Dynasty: "when he was young, he learned to bow and horse, and was a knight errant. He was light on money and bribed. When he was long, he was good at ancient learning."
Idiom usage
To read in anger. For 40 years, I met Zhang Jingzang, who said that I should prepare for the prime minister with literature and abandon myself without doing anything. I'm going to read a lot. "Kaiyuan shengpingyuan" by Wu Jing in Tang Dynasty
Chinese PinYin : zhé jié dú shū
take a sudden liking to studying
improve learning and hide the sword. xiū wén yǎn wǔ
look for the tip of the branch while give up the trunk of the tree. sǔn běn zhú mò
a carbuncle neglected becomes the bane of your life. yǎng yōng yí huàn
do a discreditable thing secretly. àn shì kuī xīn
human hearts are not what they were in the old days. rén xīn bù gǔ
take advantage of a weak point. chéng xū ér rù