be off to distant places
The Chinese idiom, G ā of ē iyu ǎ NZ ǒ u, is used to describe leaving a place and escaping to a distance. It comes from the biography of Zhuo Mao in the book of the later Han Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
"Zhuo Mao Zhuan in the book of the later Han Dynasty:" if you don't want to repair it, you'd rather fly away than be evil in the world
Idiom usage
To leave a place completely. example: when things are urgent, ~ can't escape. Ancient and modern Zaju: gossip of fishermen and woodcutters
Analysis of Idioms
Fly away
Chinese PinYin : gāo fēi yuǎn zǒu
be off to distant places
Buy horses and recruit soldiers. mǎi mǎ zhāo bīng
the child is father of the man. jí xiǎo jiàn dà
not to follow a set pattern of action. bù zhǔ gù cháng