go all out
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is f è NF ā D ǎ ol ì, which means to be spirited up and act quickly. From Liu Zihou's epitaph.
Analysis of Idioms
Go all out, strive for strength, strive for progress, strive for self-improvement
The origin of Idioms
Han Yu's epitaph of Liu Zihou in the Tang Dynasty: "to discuss the evidence in the present and ancient times, one hundred scholars in history, who are vigorous and resolute, often yield to the audience."
Idiom usage
A person's mental outlook. And there are thousands of young women who go out of their families and go to the front line to prevent their male compatriots from focusing on beauty. Zou Taofen's ten million youths who have worked hard since the Anti Japanese War
go all out
pass on the ancient culture without adding anything new to it - shù ér bù zuò
Risk the world's great injustice - mào tiān xià zhī dà bù wéi