disguise oneself
Disguise, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Qi á ozhu ā NGG ǎ IB à n, meaning to change the original shape, so that people do not know him. From the story of the sword.
The origin of Idioms
In Chapter 8 of the story of the sword, Guo clarified: "then he said," come disguise and break through. "
Idiom usage
As predicate, object, attribute, adverbial; refer to disguise
Examples
Every country should guard against the infiltration of spies and secret agents from other countries.
The seventh chapter of three chivalrous men and five righteousness written by Shi Yukun of Qing Dynasty: Gongsun Ce: "when I am late in life, I will disguise myself and investigate in secret. If I have a chance, I will report back."
The fourteenth chapter of three heroes and five righteousness by Shi Yukun of Qing Dynasty: when Zhan Zhao arrived at the beginning of the night, he disguised himself and sneaked into the Miao collection to come to the home of Miao Xiu.
Chapter 102 of three chivalrous men and five righteousness by Shi Yukun of Qing Dynasty: when the night is quiet, Bai Yutang disguises himself, goes out of the government office and goes straight to Xiangyang mansion.
Chinese PinYin : qiáo zhuāng gǎi bàn
disguise oneself
Drinking water to know the source. yǐn shuǐ zhī yuán
Picking melons and embracing vines. zhāi guā bào màn