Ah Dang Bi Zhou
A Dang Bi Zhou, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is ē D ǎ NGB ǐ zh ō u, which means colluding with each other, favoring each other and forming a clique for personal gain. It's from the order of neat customs.
The origin of Idioms
In the order of tidiness and customs by Cao Cao of the Three Kingdoms, it is said that "when the Party of a is compared with the Zhou Dynasty, the disease of the holy place comes first."
Idiom usage
In the Analects of Confucius of the spring and Autumn period, Lu said: "all evils must be observed; all good ones must be observed." He Yanji quoted Wang Su of the Three Kingdoms, Wei, as saying: "either all the party members of the Arab League are more than Zhou Dynasty, or they are different from each other, so we must observe their likes and dislikes."
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym]: to form a clique for personal gain, to be friends and to compete with each other
Chinese PinYin : ē dǎng bǐ zhōu
Ah Dang Bi Zhou
infer the whole matter after hearing but one point. wén yī zhī èr
the continuation is only held by a silken thread. bù jué rú lǚ
all is thrown into the eastward flowing stream. jìn fù dōng liú
the king and his ministers united all efforts for a common purpose. áo míng biē yīng
Thirty years of Hedong and thirty years of Hexi. sān shí nián hé dōng,sān shí nián hé xī
fold one's hands and await destruction. shù shǒu jiù bì