jostle one another on the way
One after another, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is m ó Ji ā NJI ēǒ ng, which means to describe crowded people, from "Warring States strategy · Qi CE Yi".
Analysis of Idioms
There are some differences between "bustling" and "mobbing": mobbing focuses on "crowding": it is only used for people, not for things, and can be modified by adverbs such as "must"; mobbing focuses on "the chaos of communication": it is mostly used for people, but also for things
Near antonym
[synonym] a sea of people, rub shoulders, shoulder to shoulder, crowded. [antonym] the door is empty
Idiom usage
Example: in Yanzi Chunqiu neipian zaxia, "three hundred Lu of Linzi, Zhang Mei Chengyin, sweating, are standing shoulder to shoulder." in history of Song Dynasty, biography of Li Xianzhong: "enter the city, announce virtue, do not kill one person, and those who belong to the Central Plains follow." "Walk into Zhouzhuang" carefully step on the arch bridge, Zhouzhuang immediately stands in front of you: the streets, buildings and ancient houses are staggering, winding, and rushing to you one after another. It seems that the water under the bridge flows like static
The origin of Idioms
"Qi CE I of Warring States policy" says: "on the way to Linzi, the car hub strikes, and people rub their shoulders."
Chinese PinYin : mó jiān jiē zhǒng
jostle one another on the way
fabricate rumours to mislead people. liú yán huò zhòng
drive one 's friends to the side of the enemy. wèi cóng qū què
store up goods to make a good bargain. tún jī jū qí
Plant in the morning and reap in the evening. zhāo zhǒng mù hù
even a wise man sometimes makes a mistake. qiān lǜ yī shī