Join hands to form a curtain
It is a Chinese idiom. The Pinyin is Ji ē m è ICH é NGW é I, which means that there are many people, one after another. Now it means a prosperous city with a large population. It comes from Liu Xiang's "Warring States strategy · Qi CE Yi".
The origin of Idioms
In the Western Han Dynasty, Liu Xiang wrote in the Warring States policy, Qi CE Yi: "on the way to Linzi, the hub of the car was hit, the shoulders of the people were rubbed, the lapels became curtains, the sleeves were raised, and the sweat became rain."
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attributive; used in writing. In Tang Dynasty, Zhang said that "under the east gate, and above the wanqiu, you can dazzle the city and believe in the suburbs of Yuzhang."
Chinese PinYin : jiē mèi chéng wéi
Join hands to form a curtain
have the courage to take the blame for what one does. gǎn zuò gǎn dāng
Discard the last and turn the root. qì mò fǎn běn
be filled with righteous indignation. yì fèn tián yīng
have great ambition but little talent. zhì dà cái shū