The Uighur entered the crowd
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is h ú R ù y ā Q ú n, which means the metaphor of invincibility. It comes from the biography of Wang Sihao in Nan'an, the book of the Northern Qi Dynasty.
Notes on Idioms
Uighur: the same as "Falcon", a ferocious bird.
The origin of Idioms
According to the biography of King Sihao of Nan'an in the book of the Northern Qi Dynasty, "if you attack a thief like a Uighur, you should think about a good thing."
Idiom usage
Subject predicate; as object; with commendatory meaning. example in the world of mortals, who is the enemy. Han Hong's poem Jige shupushe in Tang Dynasty
Chinese PinYin : hú rù yā qún
The Uighur entered the crowd
serve an emperor and do service for a throne. pān lóng fù fèng
When the tree falls, the monkeys scatter. shù dǎo hú sūn sàn
be unable to plan out one 's day. zhāo bù jí xī
support the government and cherish the people. yōng zhèng ài mín