Faltering
Stammering, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Z ī J ū Ni è R ú, which means to advance and retreat, to say and stop. Describe servile, timid look. It comes from the preface of sending Li Yuan back to Pangu.
Idiom usage
As an object or attributive, it is used in writing as an example to show that sitting makes the dust fade. The poem "you Emei" by Fang Xiaoru in Ming Dynasty
The origin of Idioms
According to the preface of sending Li Yuan back to Pangu written by Han Yu of Tang Dynasty, "if you wait at the gate of Gongqing and run on the road of situation, you will be full of hesitation, murmur, be dirty but not shy, fight against punishment and kill, and get away with it in case of death, how can you be a worthy man?"
Faltering
keep thy shop and thy shop will keep thee. - huáng tiān bù fù yǒu xīn rén
have used up one 's literary talent at all - jiāng yān cái jìn
be a dutiful son to one 's parents even in poverty - shū shuǐ chéng huān