Che Ma piantian
Che Ma piantian, a Chinese idiom, is pronounced ch ē m ǎ PI á NTI á n, which means that there are many cars and horses. It's very lively. It comes from the preface to Huiri medicine garden by Yang Jiong of Tang Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Yang Jiong's preface to the poetry of Huiri medicine garden in Tang Dynasty: "the clothes and crowns are disorderly, and you can go out of the city to travel on a plate; the cars and horses are parallel, and you can drink on the Bank of the river."
Idiom usage
As an object or attributive, it is used in bazaars, etc. Selected works of Qunying
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym]: Che Ma Fu
Chinese PinYin : chē mǎ pián tián
Che Ma piantian
hundred blocks start working to do every piece at the same time. bǎi dǔ jiē zuò
Absorb the new and explain the old. xī xīn tǔ gù
Accumulated exposure makes waves. jī lù wéi bō
A cup of wine and a spear of spear. bēi jiǔ gē máo
make one 's appearance tally with one 's inner mind. biǎo lǐ yī zhì