Common ground
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is g à nggu à NT ó ngTi á o, which means to string on the same coin string and grow on the same branch. The metaphors are coherent in context and interlinked in reason. It comes from the biography of Mr. Shiya by Wang Fuzhi of Qing Dynasty.
Explanation string on the same coin string, grow on the same branch. The metaphors are coherent in context and interlinked in reason.
It comes from Wang Fuzhi's biography of Mr. Shiya in Qing Dynasty: "tears and smiles are all the actions of God, while wandering is the response of Qi. You can get my brother here The essence of the same principle. "
Chinese PinYin : gòng guàn tóng tiáo
Common ground
carry out with drive and sweep. léi lì fēng xíng
lift one 's feet very high and put them down very slowly. jiǎo gāo bù dī