roll up one 's sleeves and raise one 's fists to fight

roll up one 's sleeves and raise one 's fists to fight

A Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is Xu ā nqu á NL ǔ Xi ù, which means to push the sleeve up, show the arm, hold the fist, and describe ready to start. From Ma Danyang by Yang Jingxian in Yuan Dynasty.

Idiom usage

The five cities of shuntianfu, Qingyi, are all searching there.

Analysis of Idioms

Synonyms: eager to try, ready to move

The origin of Idioms

Yang Jingxian, Yuan Dynasty, wrote in Ma Danyang: "you're a happy detective. You don't need to make trouble. You don't know how to bully the good and oppress the good. You don't know how to be cruel. You don't know how to distinguish between the low and the high."

Idiom explanation

Push your sleeve up to reveal your arm and clench your fist. I'm ready to do it.

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