A hundred feet are not stiff
It is a Chinese idiom. Its pinyin is B ǎ iz ú B ù Ji ā ng, which means that a powerful group or individual is not easy to collapse. It's from the destruction of the general meeting of members of the political news agency.
The origin of Idioms
Zhang Binglin's "report on the destruction of the general meeting of members of the political, media and social organizations" said: "today, Myanmar has been merged with Britain, and the chieftains of the country, with a small number of black spots, are still enough to protect themselves, not to be led by human beings, and never to be rigid."
Idiom usage
As an object or attribute, it refers to dying.
Chinese PinYin : bǎi zú bù jiāng
A hundred feet are not stiff
speeches are not in accordance with action. yán bù gù xíng