take a sudden liking to studying
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is zh é Ji é D ú sh ū, which means to change old habits and read angrily. It comes from the biography of Duan 颎 in the later Han Dynasty.
Idiom explanation
Compromise: change your past interests and behaviors.
The origin of Idioms
The biography of Duan Yu in the book of the later Han Dynasty: "when he was young, he learned to bow and horse, and was a knight errant. He was light on money and bribed. When he was long, he was good at ancient learning."
Idiom usage
To read in anger. For 40 years, I met Zhang Jingzang, who said that I should prepare for the prime minister with literature and abandon myself without doing anything. I'm going to read a lot. "Kaiyuan shengpingyuan" by Wu Jing in Tang Dynasty
take a sudden liking to studying
the courageous are free from fear - yǒng zhě bù jù
laws handed down from forefathers - zǔ zōng jiā fǎ
cut down annual expenditures in order to enrich the people - jié yòng yù mín
To pull a sword to destroy Tibet - lā bǎi cuī cáng