Go out into the chariot
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is ch ū y ú R ù Ni ǎ n, which means to take a bus when you move. It's from Qifa.
The origin of Idioms
Meicheng, Han Dynasty, wrote in Qifa: "when my husband went out into the chariot, he ordered me to be impotent."
Idiom usage
Although the emperor of the former generation was forbidden in the palace, he went out into the chariot. History of the Song Dynasty: biography of Lu Dafang
Go out into the chariot
courage of a warrior and the soul of a musician - jiàn tai xiāo xīn
The crane is long and the duck is short - hè cháng fú duǎn
My sister-in-law drowns my uncle - sǎo nì shū yuán
search into an abstruse subject and indicate the importance - gōu xuán tí yào
look after the suffering of the people - guān xīn mín mò