Persevere
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is zh í Ru ì P ī Ji ā n, which means to fight or prepare for battle. It comes from Ming Dynasty's Wu Mingshi's "returning home in Splendor".
Idiom usage
It means well equipped
Analysis of Idioms
A synonym: to be strong and to be sharp
The origin of Idioms
In Ming Dynasty, Wu Mingshi's "returning home in Splendor" the first fold: "to lead the soldiers, to arrange the troops, to be not light, to hold the tripod to pull out the mountain power, to monopolize hundreds of cities in the eastern Wu Dynasty."
Idiom explanation
Zhi: take it; Rui: sharp, sharp, refers to weapons; Jian: refers to armor, ancient soldiers' protective clothing. Wearing armor and carrying weapons. To engage in or prepare for a battle.
Chinese PinYin : zhí ruì pī jiān
Persevere
Four bodies do not work hard, five grains do not divide. sì tǐ bù qín,wǔ gǔ bù fēn