offer oneself
Volunteer, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Z ì g à of è NY ǒ ng, which means to take the initiative to undertake a difficult task. It's from officialdom.
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym] volunteer and stand up to the challenge
The origin of Idioms
In the 53rd chapter of Li Baojia's Officialdom appearance in the Qing Dynasty, "Rao Shou originally had only one lion kingdom. Because the leader advocated studying abroad, he volunteered and was willing to bring his own axe and ask his son to go abroad."
Idiom usage
Subject predicate; predicate, object, adverbial; commendatory. More than 50 top-grade young hunters were selected by the kind fishermen and went to look for them with bows and arrows. The thirty six chapters of Qu Bo's forest sea and snow plain
offer oneself
as brilliant as the sun , the moon and the stars - jiǎo rú rì xīng
difficult to guess or comprehend - xuán miào mò cè
take what our forebears have left us but as a departure for new inventions - chéng qián qǐ hòu