come in great numbers
Flocking, a Chinese idiom, pronounced f ē ngy ō ng é RZH ì, means flocking like a swarm of bees. It describes a lot of people coming to a place in disorder. It's from flowers in the mirror.
The origin of Idioms
Chapter 26 of Jing Hua Yuan written by Li Ruzhen in Qing Dynasty: "Xu Chengzhi was waiting for him to go far away. Just as he was about to return to the boat, the dust was rolling in front of him, and the shouting was approaching, and many more grass-roots bandits came. They are all wearing Haoran scarves and mobile phone equipment
Idiom usage
There are no less than hundreds of thousands of bandits at the seven sentries. When they gather in the crowd, they blow with their horns, and they all rush in. ——Book of the departure date of Yongchang sentinel bandits by Lin Zexu in Qing Dynasty
Analysis of Idioms
Antonyms: fish in, fish in, fish in, fish in, fish in, fish in, fish in, fish in, fish in, fish in, fish in, fish in, fish in, fish in
Chinese PinYin : fēng yōng ér zhì
come in great numbers
attend to each one 's own duties. gè sī qí shì
Attack the flaw and point out the loss. gōng xiá zhǐ shī