Dress together
The Chinese idiom, J ǐ ch á ngli á nm è I in pinyin, means that the dress is attached to the dress and the sleeve is held by the sleeve. There are many people. From "rebuilding the monument of merit and virtue in the corridor of Kaiyuan Temple"
summary
meaning
The clothes and skirts are connected, and the sleeves are pulled. There are many people.
source
Liu Congyi of the Song Dynasty wrote in his "rebuilding the monument of merit and virtue in the corridor of Kaiyuan Temple" that "the beautiful clothes and make-up follow the sun, and the fresh cars and angry horses make up the rut in the early morning."
example sentence
Look at the clothes at the door of the supermarket. It turns out that the supermarket is delivering eggs. Look at the old man and the old lady. They just pick up the baskets, and they don't want to pick enough when they find the number.
usage
component
As object and attribute.
Discrimination
[synonym] shanglianchen [synonym] mountain and sea of people [antonym] desolate
Chinese PinYin : jǐ cháng lián mèi
Dress together
Carve the spleen and the kidney. juān pí zhuó shèn
Tyranny is fiercer than tiger. kē zhè měng yú hǔ
one 's boots leaked dreadfully and in both of them there were big holes at the heels. lǚ chuān zhǒng jué