one can't avoid one's enemy
In Chinese, the Pinyin is Yu ā NJI ā L ù zh ǎ I, which means enemies meet on a narrow road. It refers to the meeting of enemies or people who don't want to meet. It's from Ling Mengchu's the first moment.
Idiom explanation
Enemies meet on narrow roads. It refers to the meeting of enemies or people who don't want to meet.
The origin of Idioms
Ling Mengchu of the Ming Dynasty, Volume 30 of the book "the first time to make a case in surprise": "it's really a narrow road for the enemy. Today, I've asked for my life."
Idiom usage
Subject predicate; predicate, attribute, object; derogatory
Examples
But don't defend ~, pour by Yang Bo Peep. The 22nd chapter of Nie Hai Hua by Zeng Pu in Qing Dynasty
Chinese PinYin : yuān jiā lù zhǎi
one can't avoid one's enemy
Long throat and short breath. hóu cháng qì duǎn