a small hole which just allows the head and the body of an animal to pass
Let the head pass is an idiom, pronounced R ó NGT ó ugu ò sh ē n, which means that as long as the head can hold, the body can pass. It's a metaphor for muddling along.
explain
As long as the head can hold, the body can pass. It's a metaphor for muddling along.
source
According to the biography of Xiqiang in the book of the later Han Dynasty, "the three prefectures are not restored today, and the gardens and mausoleums are single, but the Gongqing chooses cowardice and turns over."
Discrimination of words
Usage as predicate; metaphor muddle along
Chinese PinYin : róng tóu guò shēn
a small hole which just allows the head and the body of an animal to pass
many sand piled up will make a mountain. jī shuǐ wéi shān
it is better to be the bill of a chicken than the anus of an ox.. jī kǒu niú hòu
do something perfunctorily as a routing practice. gù shuò xì yáng
Moxibustion for headache and foot pain. tóu tòng jiǔ tóu,jiǎo tòng jiǔ jiǎo
as if urged by gods or demons. shén móu mó dào
embarrassed by undeserved praise. kuì bù gǎn dāng
The three principles are the same. sān zhǐ xiàng gōng