ready to fight
The Chinese idiom, Pinyin is h é ngqi ā ngyu è m ǎ, which means to hold a weapon and gallop on a horse; to fight in the battlefield; to jump on a horse. It's from "fighting tiger with filial piety in Yanmen pass".
Analysis of Idioms
Hengge Leaping Horse, Hengdao immediately
The origin of Idioms
In Yuan Dynasty, Chen Yiren's Yanmen pass, cunxiao beats a tiger: "when I see a man wearing a robe and armor bravely, I am angry and angry, and jump across the horse."
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attributive; used of soldiers, etc.
Examples
If you don't fight for your motherland, how can you know her magnificent mountains and rivers. A poem by Li Ying
ready to fight
I've been used to it for a long time - jiǔ guàn lǎo chéng