It's no place to be
Not to mention, the Chinese idiom, Pinyin is B ù Hu á NGN í ngch ǔ, which means to be busy with heavy or urgent affairs when there is no leisure. It comes from game theory.
Idiom explanation
Not to mention: leisure.
The origin of Idioms
Wu Weizhao's game theory of the Three Kingdoms states: "if you can't learn, you're afraid of losing it. So it's hard to work hard, to be up in the morning and to sleep at night
Idiom usage
It is used as predicate and attributive. He often goes to his life, but he wants to repay his kindness, so he rushes down to Liaohe, not to mention a place of peace. In the Tang Dynasty, Zhang Zhuo's Youxian cave and the biography of Huan Wen in the book of Jin, it is said that "it is not better to drive the Horde than to be in peace, and the front and back of the Horde are clear, and it is in the past years."
It's no place to be
with both extensive knowledge and profound scholarship - dà hán xì rù
Cut the moon and carve out the clouds - cái yuè lòu yún
one 's heart flutters like a pennant in the wind - xīn rú xuán jīng
be unable to plan out one 's day - zhāo bù móu xī
lay down one's life for justice - shě shēng qǔ yì