Grip the collar
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is w ò g āā NGT í L ǐ ng, which means to grasp the gist or to prompt the content to the point. From Jin PANI's answer to Fulham.
Idiom usage
Used as an object or attribute; used in writing
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms: Outline
The origin of Idioms
In Jin PANI's reply to Fu Xian, he said: "a long group of officials is not the son's integrity; a crying public opinion is not the son's restlessness. Hu He Lue Niu, holding the compendium and lifting the collar; Jiao Zhen Chen, only the screen of the country. "
Idiom explanation
Grip: take and grasp. It is a metaphor to grasp the gist or to give a brief hint of the content.
Chinese PinYin : wò gāng tí lǐng
Grip the collar
sth. unfortunate , esp. death. yī cháng liǎng duǎn
A generation of great ministers. yī dài zōng chén
go to the battle-front without any burden. qīng zhuāng shàng zhèn
a single post cannot bear the burden. yī mù nán zhī
high degree of difficulty reflects masterly skill. yīn nán jiàn qiǎo