Pillow the mountain and the sea
As an idiom, it is used as predicate and attributive, which means to be close to the mountain and the sea. It comes from "Changan Hakka · guyuguan" written by Jiang Yikui in Ming Dynasty: "Xuda, the king of Wuning in this dynasty, was on the north side of the road, which is called the pillow mountain and the sea, which is the throat of Liao Ji. He moved it here, and even cited the Great Wall as the site of the city."
Idiom explanation
[explanation]: close to the mountain and the sea.
Source of allusion
"Xuda, the king of Wuning in the Ming Dynasty, was on the north side of the town, which was called the pillow mountain and the sea. It was the throat of the Liao Ji. He moved it to the north and even led the Great Wall to the site of the city."
Discrimination of words
Close synonym: pillow the mountain and bear the sea
Idiom usage
Grammatical usage: used as predicate and attribute; used in writing
Chinese PinYin : zhěn shān jīn hǎi
Pillow the mountain and the sea
be frightened out of one's wits. xīn dǎn jù liè
shoulder to shoulder and hub to hub. mó jiān jiē gǔ
public opinions are divergent. zhòng shuō fēn róu
Invincible, invincible. zhàn wú bù shèng,gōng wú bù kè
There is nothing to be blamed for. wú yǐ sè zé