Travel in and out
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is j ì NL ǚ Tu ì L ǚ, which means you are a traveler. It means a guest or traveler. From the book of rites, music.
The origin of Idioms
Dai Sheng's book of rites and music in the Western Han Dynasty: "today's husband and ancient music, travel and retreat." "I don't want the bravery of every man, but I want him to move in and out."
Idiom usage
It means that the queue moves forward and backward without disorder. Let's have a good dance. The history of Song Dynasty
Chinese PinYin : jìn lǚ tuì lǚ
Travel in and out
leadership rendered ineffectual by recalcitrant subordinates. wěi dà bù diào
pull up enemy flags and behead enemy generals on the battle field. qiān qí qǔ jiàng
make a fool of oneself by foolish display. bù gǔ léi mén