follow around
It is a Chinese idiom. Pinyin is l ǘ Qi á nm ǎ h ò u, which means the officials who follow them when they travel. Can also refer to the status of humble, obedient people. It means that everything is controlled by others. From the biography of lanterns in Jingde.
explain
Can also refer to the status of humble, obedient people. It means that everything is controlled by others.
source
According to the biography of lanterns in Jingde written by Shi Daoyuan of Song Dynasty, "it's the same with people today. They just recognize that the donkey is the front and the horse is the back, and they will be themselves. Buddhism is peaceful." [example] yuan, Gao Wenxiu, meets Huang, the second discount: a villain is a person who has a lot to do with others. How dare he recognize the scholar. [grammar] combination; used as attribute and adverbial; metaphor is controlled by others.
Zen language
It refers to the slaves who follow the donkeys and horses; Zen is used to denounce those who follow others' words and deeds, but have no unique opportunity of their own. Chapter 15 of Jingde Zhuandeng record (May 1, 2003): "Master said:" it's so bitter! What a pain! It's common practice nowadays. It's just that people recognize that the donkey and the horse are going to be for themselves, and that the Buddhism is calm. "
Source of allusion
According to the biography of lanterns in Jingde written by Shi Daoyuan of Song Dynasty, "it's the same with people today. They just recognize that the donkey is the front and the horse is the back, and they will be themselves. Buddhism is peaceful."
Idiom information
Idiom explanation: it means that everything is controlled by others. idiom example: yuan · Gao Wenxiu "meet the emperor" second fold: "villain is a donkey before horse after man." commonly used degree: General emotional color: commendatory words grammatical usage: as attributive and adverbial; metaphor is dominated by people idiom structure: combined generation time: ancient times
Chinese PinYin : lǘ qián mǎ hòu
follow around
My head is burning and my forehead is rotten. tóu jiāo é làn