A fox pretends to be a bird
Hu Jia Zhang is a Chinese idiom. Its pinyin is h ú Ji ǎ ch ī zh ā ng. It refers to relying on others and bluffing. It comes from the book of the old Tang Dynasty.
Note: bravado describes pretending to be powerful. To make a false noise in order to frighten people.
explain
It means relying on others and bluffing.
allusion
"In the old book of the Tang Dynasty, Xizong Ji:" at the beginning, the fox pretends to be a tiger, and it is said that there is no enemy in the fierce male; when it spins, the bird and the fish rot, and it is nothing but breaking the account. "
usage
To act as a predicate or attributive
Discrimination of words
Degree of common use: remote emotional color: commendatory words idiom structure: combined generation time: Ancient
Chinese PinYin : hú jiǎ chī zhāng
A fox pretends to be a bird
The party is strong and prosperous. dǎng jiān shì shèng
make no distinction between right and wrong. wú jiàn shì fēi