rubbing the shoulder and following the steps
Shoulder to shoulder, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Ji ā nm ó zh ǒē, meaning shoulder to shoulder, foot to foot. A lot of people, very crowded. It comes from Qi CE Yi, the strategy of the Warring States period.
The origin of Idioms
"Qi CE I of Warring States policy" says: "on the way to Linzi, the car hub strikes, and people rub their shoulders."
Idiom usage
In the biography of Li Xianzhong in the history of the Song Dynasty: "enter the city, announce virtue, do not kill one person, and those who belong to the Central Plains will follow." Usually, it is a very quiet street. By this time, the eaves on both sides of the street will become the market of. Guo Moruo's my childhood in my youth
Chinese PinYin : jiān mó zhǒng jiē
rubbing the shoulder and following the steps
deviate from the accepted norm. lí xián zǒu bǎn
infer the whole matter after hearing but one point. wén yī zhī èr
to compose poems while holding the lance horizontally in the saddle. héng shuò fù shī
one 's love for scholars is equal to one 's thirst for water. ài cái rú kě
ready to accept either course. mó léng liǎng kě