jostle each other
It's a Chinese idiom. Pinyin is B ǐ Ji ā NDI é zh ǒ ng, which means stepping on the heel at the tip of the foot. It describes many people. It comes from volume one of Lang Qian Ji Wen.
The origin of Idioms
Chen Kangqi's "Lang Qian Ji Wen" in Qing Dynasty, Volume 1: "Liao Shen's old people are better than those left by the dynasty. They are shoulder to shoulder and share the same palm of silk."
Idiom usage
It refers to the crowd
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: shoulder to shoulder; antonym: sparrows, few people
Chinese PinYin : bǐ jiān dié zhǒng
jostle each other
eject the bit and gnaw the reins. guǐ xián qiè pèi
retire and give room to better men. tuì ràng xián lù
apparently right but actually wrong. sì shì ér fēi
reorganize the army and strengthen the military power. zhěng jūn jīng wǔ
have a large stock of information. xué shí yuān bó