assiduous
Zizilu, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Z ī Z ī K ū K ū, which means diligent and unremitting. It comes from on contending for officials.
The origin of Idioms
Han Yu of Tang Dynasty wrote on contending for officials: "since ancient times, sages and sages did not seek to hear and use. They were not afraid to be good at their own way because of the injustice of the time and the injustice of the people. Instead, they had to help the whole world and work hard to die."
Idiom usage
Used as an attributive or adverbial; used in writing. Examples there are several volumes in the unfinished book, the collection of reading history, which lead to the root of the original, push and release it. Wei Yuan's tomb list of the king of Wuyuan in Qing Dynasty
assiduous
If two tigers fight each other, there must be a wound - èr hǔ xiāng dòu,bì yǒu yī shāng
place open to attack from all directions - sì zhàn zhī dì
as timid as a rat which peeps out its head and dares to do nothing - shǔ shǒu fèn shì