ask others for help
Shuyun qihuo is a Chinese idiom. Its pinyin is sh ù y ù NQ ǐ Hu ǒ, which means asking for help. It is also a metaphor for resolving difficulties. It comes from Kuai Tong Zhuan in the history of Han Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
"Kuai Tong Zhuan of the Han Dynasty:" the mother of my hometown is not a person to talk about, nor is it a way to return the fire to the wife. However, things are related to each other, and things are appropriate. "
Idiom usage
To refer to a person
Examples
In the Song Dynasty, Fang Yue's three tigers travel: "the sound of beating the door is urgent, who's son, who's son, who's son, who's son, who's son, who's son, who's son, who's son, who's son, who's son, who's son."
Idiom story
Once upon a time, there was a mother-in-law who falsely accused her daughter-in-law of stealing the meat from her family. Her daughter-in-law was driven out of the house by her mother-in-law and had to go to her neighbor's aunt to help her redress the injustice. Aunt knew her well, so she came up with a way to borrow fire from her mother-in-law's house. She said that her dog was killed because she was fighting to eat other people's meat. Knowing her mistake, her mother-in-law went after her daughter-in-law and went home
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym]: Shuluo raises fire, Shuluo asks for fire, Shuluo returns to wife
Chinese PinYin : shù yùn qǐ huǒ
ask others for help
standing like a tripod -- a tripartite balance of forces. dǐng zú ér jū
unparalleledly wonderful in one's time. miào jué shí rén
Fall on one's feet and beat one's chest. diē jiǎo chuī xiōng