tie one's hands behind his back
Wu Hua Da tie, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is w à Hu à D à B à ng, which means to tie a rope around the neck first and then around the back to cut back the arms. From Wang GUI and Li Xiangxiang.
The origin of Idioms
Li Ji's "Wang GUI and Li Xiangxiang" part 2: "tie along the bundle, hang on the beam."
Word usage
In Li Fengshan's Xiao Wu Yi, Zhong Xiong kicks his foot and orders him to tie it up. Then the third master moves around and makes people tie up again. In Ke Yan's strange slips, the pursuer of beauty, he has been tied up in all kinds of ways. The heavy bar immediately crushed his legs.
Chinese PinYin : wǔ huā dà bǎng
tie one's hands behind his back
solicit help from potential backers high and low. zuàn dòng mì féng
sacrifice oneself to protect others. shě jǐ wèi rén
plant trees for the benefit of posterity. qián rén zāi shù,hòu rén chéng liáng
a long life of abundance and respectability. cháng mìng fù guì