keep out of the way
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is Xi ā OSH ē ngli ǎ NJ ì, which means that words are still disappearing. To conceal from the public. It's from BEIMENG Suoyan.
The origin of Idioms
Volume 11 of sun Guangxian's northern dream Suoyan of the Song Dynasty: "Zong state was in chaos, and Fu Zong was lucky in Shu. He also went to Jinjiang, where he lived. However, he was afraid of Yingchuan, so he traveled to Zizhong County, where he was afraid of being known
Analysis of Idioms
Vanishing
Idiom usage
As predicate, object, attribute; used of people or things.
Examples
However, after entering the city, because of the revolutionary momentum, this generation has lost their reputation and can't see them perform their tricks in public. Sun Li's "old news in the countryside: Bachelor"
Idiom story
In the period of emperor Xizong of Tang Dynasty, Zongsheng, a native of Chang'an, had a close relationship with Chen Jingyu, the governor of Sichuan Province. Because of the war, Tang Fu Zong fled to Sichuan, and Zongsheng also fled to Jinjiang. For fear that Chen Jingyu would know, he went to Zizhong County to travel. He kept his track all the way for fear that he might leak information.
Chinese PinYin : xiāo shēng liǎn jì
keep out of the way
forget sb . 's past error and forgive him. lüè jì yuán xīn
great literature and classical works. gāo wén dà cè
meet by chance like patches of drifting duckweed. píng shuǐ xiāng féng