Marry and chase
The Chinese idiom, Ji à g à UZH ú g à u in pinyin, means that a woman can only obey her husband. It comes from "chicken ribs" by Zhuang Jiyu of Song Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Under the volume of chicken ribs edited by Zhuang Jiyu of Song Dynasty: "Du Shaoling's newlywed farewell says:" a chicken and a dog must be killed. ". It is said in the world that the saying goes, "if you marry a chicken, you will drive a chicken to fly, and if you marry a dog, you will drive a dog to go.".
Idiom usage
It refers to women's idea of marrying husband
Chinese PinYin : jià gǒu zhú gǒu
Marry and chase
give up all confidence in oneself. zì gān duò luò
A slow sparrow should make an early start.. bèn niǎo xiān fēi
A hundred clumsy and a thousand ugly. bǎi zhuō qiān chǒu
Listen to the sound with your bones. chuāi gǔ tīng shēng