burn one's bridges
There is no retreat, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y ǒ UJ ì NW ú Tu ì, meaning only forward, no retreat. It comes from the chronicles of the Eastern Zhou Dynasty by Feng Menglong of Ming Dynasty.
Idiom explanation
Only forward, not backward. It means to march forward without flinching.
The origin of Idioms
Zhou Chu, the 28th chapter of the book of Jin, said: "when you persuade me to withdraw, you press the sword and say," this is the day when I give orders on the day of the efficacious Festival. In ancient times, good generals were ordered to chisel fierce doors to get out, and there was no way to retreat. Now that the army has lost faith, it is bound to fail. I'm a minister. I can't do anything for my country. "
burn one's bridges
thieves and police work together , as the cat and the rat sleep together - māo shǔ tóng mián
Simple outside and clear inside - wài jiǎn nèi míng
spring scenery provokes people 's interest - chūn sè liáo rén