I'm in a hurry and I'm in a hurry
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is sh é ch í L ì K ù n, which means to describe the yearning of the mind and the faint of the mind. It's from Luo Shui Bei.
The origin of Idioms
Wang Daokun, Ming Dynasty, wrote in the sorrow of Luoshui: "I'm sorry that my hands are bright in the snow, but I'm afraid I'll turn back into clouds. Since Luoshen is gone, I'm very sleepy. I don't think that lonely hall can survive until dawn."
Idiom usage
As a predicate, attribute, adverbial; used of the state of a person.
I'm in a hurry and I'm in a hurry
unable to swallow a bite of food or close one 's eyes in sleep - qǐn shí jù fèi
save one 's country so that it may survive - jiù wáng tú cún
put out a fire and shake the boiling - jiù huǒ yáng fèi
Failure is the mother of success - shī bài wéi chéng gōng zhī m
the ornamental and the combined plain properties - wén zhì bīn bīn