come one after another
One after another, the Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Ji ē zh ǒ ng é RZH ì, which means that people come one after another with their front feet following their back feet. It describes people coming one after another or things happening continuously. It's from "the strategy of Warring States · Qi CE San".
Idiom explanation
Heel: heel; heel: heel meets toe. It refers to people coming from front to back. There are a lot of people coming.
The origin of Idioms
The third chapter of Qi CE in the Warring States strategy: "few people have heard about Zi Lai. One scholar stands by his shoulder for thousands of miles, and one saint for hundreds of generations. If he comes with him, he will see seven scholars in one dynasty, then there are not many scholars."
Idiom usage
To be formal; to be predicate or attributive; used in writing. Chapter 82 of the chronicles of the states of the Eastern Zhou Dynasty: "the envoys of Wei came one after another, and Confucius said," I am a new monarch, I admire my master, and I dare to offer my wonderful taste. " Zhang Binglin's "on the new party's admonition" said: "Taiwan's cutting, Lushun's cutting, Qingdao's cutting, Weihai's cutting, followed." Taiwan, Qingdao and Weihai. On the new party by Zhang Binglin
Chinese PinYin : jiē zhǒng ér zhì
come one after another
search for seclusion and beautiful scenery. xún yōu tàn shèng
gang up for selfish one 's own selfish interests. jié dǎng yíng sī