The bark of a dog
It's a Chinese idiom. Pinyin is g ǒ UF è izh ī J ī ng, which means small fright. It comes from the biography of the lord father of Marquis Pingjin in historical records.
Idiom explanation
Explanation: Barking: barking of the dog; startling: startling. It's a little bit of a shock.
Idioms and allusions
Source: Sima Qian's biography of the lord father of the Marquis of Pingjin in historical records of the Western Han Dynasty: "there is no fear of dogs barking in China today, but it's far away."
"Yan Zhuzhuan of the Han Dynasty:" there is no dog barking in this area. "
You should not be frightened by this.
Discrimination of words
Warning of barking
Usage: used as an object; used as a metaphor for small fright
Chinese PinYin : gǒu fèi zhī jīng
The bark of a dog
every cent goes into the public account. juān dī guī gōng
Distinguish between the sun and the cold. biàn rì yán liáng