Don't spit out
Gegebutu, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is g ē g ē B ù t ǔ, which means that there is something in the way and you can't discuss it freely. It comes from he Zhuo's Yimen Shudu Ji Yuanfeng Lei manuscript in Qing Dynasty.
Idiom usage
Because if we want to push down the old things, we have to exert ourselves. If we exert ourselves too much, we have to do something. If we do too much, we will not only be astringent, but sometimes we can't say anything.
The origin of Idioms
He Zhuo's Yimen Shudu Ji Yuanfeng Lei manuscript in Qing Dynasty: "shangouyang Sheren Shu is weak and fragmentary, and its discussion of things is not out of tune, so it is rare to write it."
Idiom explanation
It means that there is something in the way and we can't discuss it as much as we like.
Don't spit out
reading by the light of fireflies - náng yíng zhào shū