What idioms are there to describe "going out"?

Go forward, do not hesitate, advance wave after wave, be in flight, abandon your helmet and armor

First, move forward.

Explanation: Go forward bravely.

From: Song Zhuxi's Complete Works of Zhu Zi, Taoism and Zhou Zishu: "Regardless of other people's right and wrong, regardless of their own gains and losses, go forward and tell the truth that people dare not tell."

Regardless of whether others are or not, regardless of your own gains and losses, go ahead and tell the truth that others dare not tell.

Second, there is no turning back.

Interpretation: righteousness: morality; Look back: look back. Morally, we can only go forward and look back without hesitation.

From: Han Sima Xiangru's "Jade and Silk Book Order": "If you touch the white blade and risk the arrow flow, you will not count if you don't look back."

Touch the sword, brave the rain of arrows, go forward bravely, and don't care if you can turn back.

Third, it is passed down from generation to generation.

Explanation: servant: fall; G: then, keep up. The front fell, and the back also fell. Describe a heroic struggle.

From: Qing Qiu Jin's "The Martyr of Hanging Arms": "The former servants and successors should be there; If you deserve XuanYuanSun! "

Translation: Fall in front and follow closely behind; If you are not ashamed of being a descendant of Xuanyuan

Four. sabotage

Explanation: collapse: rout, collapse. Beaten to pieces, no team. Describe a fiasco.

Said by: Li Zicheng, Volume I, Chapter 8: "When the enemy's spirit begins to decline, you can seize the key points and strike hard, and you can beat the enemy to flight."

5. Lose one's helmet and abandon one's armor [Di Ku and Qi Ji M:]

Description: helmet and armor: helmet and armor. I lost my armor when I ran away. Describe the appearance of running away after defeat.

From: "Mencius Hui Liang Wang Shang" During the Warring States Period, Mencius said: "When filling drums, weapons must be connected, and troops will be dragged away from armor, or stop at a hundred steps or stop at fifty steps."

When the drums were beating, the soldiers of the two armies touched their knives and guns, took off their helmets and armor, and dragged their weapons and fled. Some stopped after running a hundred paces, while others stopped after running fifty paces.