Climbing the scales
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is f ù J ì P ā NL í n, meaning to follow a famous person and become famous. From "Dai Xia Junfu banquet people's speech".
The origin of Idioms
Shi Huihong of the Song Dynasty wrote a poem called "the speech to the banquet of Xia Junfu:" the heart is always in the blue sky and the day, and the ambition of climbing the dragon is not destroyed. "
Idiom usage
Combined; used as predicate and attributive; with derogatory meaning; refers to relying on celebrities to become famous.
Chinese PinYin : fù jì pān lín
Climbing the scales
the rich men dare not sit right under the eaves. zuò bù chuí táng
have neither fault to find with nor praise to bestow. wú jiù wú yù
The arrow pierces the goose's beak. jiàn chuān yàn zuǐ
the slow need to start early. bèn niǎo xiān fēi
Give up the easy and ask for the difficult. qì yì qiú nán