disguise oneself
Qiaozhuang Gaidai is a Chinese idiom. Pinyin is Qi á ozhu ā NGG ǎ IB à n, which means that make-up changes the image and conceals the original identity. It is also called "disguise" or "disguise". From the three heroes and five righteousness.
Notes on Idioms
Joe: fake. Qiao Makeup: change clothes and face.
The origin of Idioms
Chapter 77 of three chivalrous men and five righteousness by Shi Yukun in Qing Dynasty: (Bai Yutang) he disguised himself as a gentle scholar, wearing a square scarf and a flowery cloak. He stepped out of the shop with a pair of thick bottomed red shoes and a clay gold folding fan in his hand.
Idiom usage
As predicate, object, attribute, adverbial; refers to disguise. Chapter 12 of the Qing Dynasty's anonymous case of Liu Gong: "I'm going to Shilibao today. I'm going to visit the people in disguise."
Chinese PinYin : qiáo zhuāng gǎi bàn
disguise oneself
a country finally falls after its territory has been nibbled away. shì kāng jí mǐ
sincere words and earnest wishes. yǔ zhòng xīn cháng
more moneys on exhibit and less moneys on counterfoil. dà tóu xiǎo wěi
with a chest full of scales and shells. xiōng zhōng lín jiǎ
A slow person will meet with success if he persists in study.. dùn xué lěi gōng