In line with each other
In Chinese, Pinyin is h é Z ø ngli á NH é ng, which means to unite against the enemy. It comes from Qin CE Yi.
Idiom explanation
From: through "vertical"; balance: through "horizontal".
The origin of Idioms
Qin CE Yi, the Warring States policy, said: "about from Lian Heng, the military revolution does not hide."
Idiom usage
To unite against the enemy. As for the Warring States period, the whole world was divided into seven parts, and they were united and United. After several decades, the Qin Dynasty merged into the four seas. The history of the Han Dynasty
Idioms and allusions
During the Warring States period, the wars between the vassals were frequent, causing chaos and chaos, and people could not live and work in peace and contentment. Qin was very powerful, and the six states of Qi, Chu, Yan, Han, Zhao and Wei were eyeing it. In order to prevent Qin's annexation, Su Qin went to the six countries to lobby them to unite against Qin's attack. Zhang Yi lobbied the six states to bow to Qin.
Chinese PinYin : hé zòng lián héng
In line with each other
There is no good step in a tight line. jǐn xíng wú hǎo bù
have the courage to take the blame for what one does. gǎn zuò gǎn dāng
Extravagance and extravagance. jiāo yì shē yín
A dog in front of his feet eats Yao. zhí quǎn shì yáo
hoist the sail and pull the towline. chě péng lā qiàn
remove mountains and drain seas. yí shān dǎo hǎi