Rub one's hands and sharpen one's fists
The Chinese idiom, Pinyin is C ā zh ǎò NGM ò Qu á n, describes ready to fight, ready to do or anxious. From journey to the West.
The origin of Idioms
The second chapter of journey to the West: "the great sage protected Tang Monk Seeing that Bajie was at war with that monster, he was so angry that he gnashed his teeth and rubbed his hands. He couldn't help beating him. "
Idiom usage
Be ready to do sth. Xia Yan's "fascist bacteria" Act 2: Yu Shifu suddenly stands up, shoumeizi is about to run out, and Jingzi holds her. Chapter 25 of biography of heroes and heroines written by Wen Kang of Qing Dynasty: "one by one, they are worried."
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms: rub one's fists and hands, rub one's fists and hands
Rub one's hands and sharpen one's fists
Guess from the East and guess from the West - dōng cāi xī chuāi
small in number and weak in strength - liàng xiǎo lì wēi
make excuses and put obstacles in the way - tuī sān zǔ sì