rest on one's arms
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is zh ě ng ē y ǐ D à, which means to pillow weapons, waiting for the dawn. He is eager to kill the enemy and serve the country. It's the same as "waiting for the day". It comes from Zhang Huangyan of Ming Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Zhang Huangyan of the Ming Dynasty wrote in his book "going up in the north and south of Chen Dynasty, it's opportune to be spared": "although a minister is slow, he should be ready to wait.
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym]: pillow, pillow, pillow, pillow, pillow, pillow, pillow, pillow, pillow, pillow, pillow, pillow, pillow, pillow, pillow, pillow, pillow, pillow, pillow, pillow, pillow, pillow, pillow, pillow, pillow, pillow, pillow, pillow, pillow, pillow, pillow
Idiom usage
He talked with Li Wenzhen about the book of changes. Every midnight, he had to wait for many things. Zhao Yao's Xiaoting miscellany: Minister of yourong in Qing Dynasty
rest on one's arms
unequalled or peerless in the whole country - hǎi nèi wú shuāng
gifted scholars and beautiful ladies - jiā rén cái zǐ
when the flood approaches bank up to keep it out - shuǐ lái tǔ yǎn
Three cobblers are better than Zhuge Liang - sān gè chòu pí jiàng,sài guò zhū gě liàng