prone
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is h é ngtu à D à och à, which means to drag. It comes from the biography of three Suiping demons and the biography of heroes.
The origin of Idioms
In the fifth chapter of the biography of the three Suiping demons by Luo Guanzhong of Ming Dynasty, "Zhang Qian and Li Wan, when they see Jiao's questions from outside, can't help but tell each other and drag their way into the mansion." The 16th chapter of biography of heroes written by Xu Wei of Ming Dynasty: "who knows, one side of his body, he dismounted from his horse, but his stirrup caught one foot and was pulled down by the horse."
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym]: drag and drop, drag and drop
Idiom usage
In the eighth chapter of master Xueqiao's shuangfengqiyuan in Qing Dynasty: "the next promise, I'm sorry to drag Wang Zhong down."
Chinese PinYin : héng tuō dào chě
prone
Be indomitable in the face of danger. lín wēi bù náo
cause-and-effect relationship. yuán qīng liú qīng
Three cobblers are better than Zhuge Liang. sān gè chòu pí jiàng,sài guò zhū gě liàng