Travel in and out
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is j ì NL ǚ Tu ì L ǚ, which means you are a traveler. It means a guest or traveler. From the book of rites, music.
The origin of Idioms
Dai Sheng's book of rites and music in the Western Han Dynasty: "today's husband and ancient music, travel and retreat." "I don't want the bravery of every man, but I want him to move in and out."
Idiom usage
It means that the queue moves forward and backward without disorder. Let's have a good dance. The history of Song Dynasty
Chinese PinYin : jìn lǚ tuì lǚ
Travel in and out
Take advantage of the situation. jiè pō xià lǘ
Make a chisel by measuring a peg. liàng ruì zhì záo
talented men still remained in concealment. cáng lóng wò hǔ
put things right once and for all. yī láo yǒng yì
three people spreading reports of a tiger make you believe there is one around. sān rén chéng hǔ
there is internal strife afoot. xìn fā xiāo qiáng
it was as though a tiger left his hills and descended to the plains. hǔ luò píng yáng