Hand in hand
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is d ǎ ozh í sh ǒ UB ǎ n, which means panic. It comes from the biography of Xie an in the book of Jin.
Idiom story
During the Eastern Jin Dynasty, general Huan Wen took control of the government. On his way to the mausoleum, he took a rest in the new pavilion, mobilized soldiers to protect him, and prepared to move to the Jin room to replace him. He sent people to ask Xie an and Wang Tanzhi to attend the appointment and prepare to kill them at the banquet. Wang Tanzhi was very scared, but he had to go to see him. He was so scared that he was sweating and turned his back on his work. Xie an took his seat calmly.
The origin of Idioms
According to the biography of xie'an in the book of Jin, "when you go to the mausoleum, stop at the new pavilion, big Chen Bingwei will move to the Jin room, and Hu'an and Wang Tan will do harm to it. I'm afraid Both see warm, Tan's sweat stained clothes, handshake. Take your seat at ease.
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attributive.
Analysis of Idioms
Hand in hand
Chinese PinYin : dǎo zhí shǒu bǎn
Hand in hand
reward according to sb . 's deserts. lùn gōng fēng shǎng
Not in his position, not in his politics. bù zài qí wèi,bù móu qí zhèng