of men shouting and horses neighing
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is R é NH ǎ nm ǎ s ī, which means people yell and horses hiss; it describes the scene of chaos or excitement. From "send judge Wei to get rain Zhongshan".
The origin of Idioms
Lu Lun, Tang Dynasty, wrote in his book "sending judge Wei to get the rain in Zhongshan": "if you can't hear people's words, you can have a long way in the clouds."
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: people are happy and horses are crying; antonym: people are sleepy and horses are tired
Idiom usage
To describe a noisy scene. I can only hear the noise outside. It seems that someone is shouting and horse hissing. I'm approaching the front hall. Ling Mengchu, Ming Dynasty
Chinese PinYin : rén hǎn mǎ sī
of men shouting and horses neighing
Spurt blood to pollute oneself. pēn xuè zì wū
a capable young man from a distinguished family. jiàng mén hǔ zǐ
The sea is boiling and the mountain is splitting. hǎi fèi shān liè
The Buddha is one foot high, the devil is one foot high. fó gāo yī chǐ ,mó gāo yī zhàng