Split clothes bind feet
The Chinese idiom m pinyin is Li è ch á nggu ǒ Z ú, which means to rush. It's from Guang juejiao Lun.
Idiom explanation
Break: break; wrap: wrap.
Foot binding: it is said that Gongshu set up cloud ladders for Chu to attack Song Dynasty. Mozi heard that "since Lu Dynasty, he has split his clothes and bound his feet day and night." he came here ten days and ten nights and said that the king of Chu. See "Warring States policy · song weice" and "Lu's spring and Autumn Annals · AI Lei". Later, it is used as the code of running and eagerness.
The origin of Idioms
Liang xiaobiao's Guang juejiao Lun in the Southern Dynasty said: "it's a person who is Geng Jie, who is ill, who has broken his clothes and bound his feet, who abandons his long ambition."
Idiom usage
The verb object type is used as the predicate to describe the rush.
Examples
My brother is worried about the time and does not forget to steal the clothes. He will not be able to do so soon. Zhu Xi's answer to Lu Bogong in Song Dynasty
Split clothes bind feet
turn round on one 's gallopingsteed and aim an arrow at - yuè mǎ wān gōng
set the whole room roaring with laughter - hōng táng dà xiào