rouse oneself to catch up
Catch up, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is j í Q ǐ zh í Zhu ī, meaning to act immediately and try to catch up. It comes from the collected works of Hongqing residents.
The origin of Idioms
In the collection of Hongqing Ju Shi's essays written by Sun Xun of Song Dynasty, it is said that "today's chaos has no abundance. Yuan you is not concerned about it. Those who are suitable to spend the time and do what they should do will rush to it, such as saving the fire and rescuing the waste. Otherwise, they will attack Chang Zu and rescue the chaos with chaos. The world will have to decide when."
Analysis of Idioms
Unwilling to lag behind, striving to catch up, stagnating and muddling along
Idiom usage
Take immediate action to catch up. example in this era of construction, civil strife and foreign invasion are full of dangers, and all administrative officials are responsible and eager to catch up. (chapter 35 of the popular romance of the Republic of China by Cai Dongfan and Xu Yaofu)
rouse oneself to catch up
the beautiful rivers and mountains - jǐn xiù hé shān
On the basis of private cooperation - xié sī wǎng shàng
the overturned cart in front is a warning for those behind - fù chē zhī jiàn