assemble in one place
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is ch ó ur é NGU ǎ ngzh ò ng, which means many people. It comes from the biography of Wu'an marquis in historical records.
Idiom explanation
Thick: many and dense.
The origin of Idioms
The biography of the Marquis of Wu'an in historical records: "a large number of people are recommended to the next generation."
Idiom usage
It refers to a large number of people. Chapter 35 of Li Baojia's Officialdom: after listening to him, people say that he is a fool. How can these words be said in many places. He didn't like it. In the Eastern Han Dynasty, Ban Gu's biography of Guanfu in the history of Han Dynasty: "a large number of people recommend and favor the younger generation. volume 32 of "the first moment makes a surprise on a case": "every day and night, scholars and women are noisy, and people are broad. They rub their backs shoulder to shoulder. They are provocative and indifferent. “
Idiom story
During the reign of Emperor Wu of the Han Dynasty, Guanfu was the prefect of Huaiyin. He was drunk and had a fight with Dou Fu, the younger brother of Empress Dowager Dou. For fear that the Empress Dowager would kill Guanfu, Emperor Wu reduced him to Yan Xiang. Guanfu is upright and upright. He is not good at flattery in his life. He often loses his temper because he is drunk. He never fawns on those whose status is more prominent than that of the emperor's relatives and relatives, while for those who are lower than that of the common people, the poorer they are, the more respectful and equal they are to others. As a result, he had a large number of people in his family, and the poor and inferior respected him.
Chinese PinYin : chóu rén guǎng zhòng
assemble in one place
steal what is entrusted to one 's care. zhǔ shǒu zì dào
the autumn moon and spring breeze. qiū yuè chūn fēng
have a high opinion of oneself. zì gāo zì dà