Marry and chase
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is Ji à J à zh ú J à, which means that a woman can only obey her husband after she gets married. It comes from "daijiufuyan" by Ouyang Xiu of Song Dynasty.
Idiom usage
Although it's not easy to say that her husband is ugly, I just try to persuade him to get rid of him.
Analysis of Idioms
Get married with a dog
The origin of Idioms
Ouyang Xiu's daijiu Fu Yan of Song Dynasty: "people say that if you marry a chicken, you will be chased by a dove."
Idiom explanation
It means that a married woman can only obey her husband.
Chinese PinYin : jià jī zhú jī
Marry and chase
holding a high official post , governing many places and possessing enormous wealth. fù miàn bǎi chéng
Square collar and round crown. fāng lǐng yuán guàn
overwhelm with numerical strength. rén duō shì zhòng