Pretending to be a tiger
Feihu Zhangwei, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Ji ǎ h ǔ zh ā NGW ē I, which means to intimidate others with their prestige. It comes from qunyin Lei Xuan, Zhongxiao Ji and Yu Jianzhang by Hu Wenhuan of Ming Dynasty.
Idiom usage
I don't know how to end up in the future.
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: Fox pretends to be tiger
The origin of Idioms
Hu Wenhuan of Ming Dynasty wrote in Qun Yin Lei Xuan, Zhong Xiao Ji, Yu Jian Zhang: "we should try our best to gain fame and keep prestige."
Idiom explanation
False: borrow. Intimidate others with their prestige.
Chinese PinYin : jiǎ hǔ zhāng wēi
Pretending to be a tiger
generation after generation. shēng shēng shì shì
study and relish the beauties of literature. hán yīng jǔ huá
be made wealthy and powerful when one does not want it. fù guì bī rén
close the door and stop sweeping the courtyard and tracks. bì guān què sǎo