have a retinue before and behind
The Chinese idiom, Pinyin, is Qi á NH ū h ò uy ō ng, which means that someone yells in front of you to open the way, and someone surrounds you to protect you. In the old days, it was used to describe that officials travel with a lot of people. It's from Kuai Tong.
Idiom explanation
There are people shouting in front to open the way, and there are people around to protect. In the old days, it was used to describe that officials travel with a lot of people.
Idiom usage
After school, the students rushed out of the campus.
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: echo before and echo after, call for a hundred Nuo antonym: easy to follow
The origin of Idioms
The second discount of yuan · anonymous's "earning Kuai Tong": how glorious it is to want to be an official and to be light in clothes and rich in wealth
Chinese PinYin : qián hū hòu yōng
have a retinue before and behind
with one 's hair standing on end. máo fā sǒng rán
quick-fried dragon and roasted phoenix. pēng lóng páo fèng