Ants gather and swarm
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is y ǐ J í f ē ngcu á n, which means gathering like ants and katydids; it refers to many people gathering. It comes from the preface to the poem "to the governor of March".
The origin of Idioms
The Song Dynasty of Ming Dynasty wrote a preface to the poems of Gu sipingkou, a present to the governor of March Town, which said: "the revival of Gu sipingkou, the gathering of ants, and tens of thousands of numbers led to the fall of Yongkang in Wu."
Idiom usage
It can be used as predicate or attributive.
Chinese PinYin : yǐ jí fēng cuán
Ants gather and swarm
Beat ducks to scare mandarin ducks. dǎ yā jīng yuān yāng
imitate others and thus lose one 's own individuality. hán dān xué bù
as timid as a rat which peeps out its head and dares to do nothing. shǔ shǒu fèn shì