eject the bit and gnaw the reins
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is Gu ǐ Xi á nqi è P è I, which means that the horse spits out its bit, bites off the reins, and is not bound. From Zhuangzi horseshoe.
Idiom explanation
Trick Title: spit out the horse to chew; steal the bridle: get rid of the bridle. The horse spat out its bit and bit the reins. Metaphor is not bound.
The origin of Idioms
"Zhuangzi horseshoe" says: "the husband and his wife are balanced and strangled, and the Qi and his wife are inscribed with the moon, while Ma Zhijie and Ni Kai are strangled and deceitful. Therefore, it is the crime of Bole to steal the horse's knowledge. "
Analysis of Idioms
Free and free
Idiom usage
The metaphor is not bound
Chinese PinYin : guǐ xián qiè pèi
eject the bit and gnaw the reins
the lingering fragrance of leftover cream. cán gāo shèng fù
Drink water to know the source. zhuó shuǐ zhī yuán
Success or failure depends on people. dé shī zài rén