One after another
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is zh ú L ú Xi ā NGJ ì, which refers to a large number of ships connecting head and tail. It's from Kaihe Ji.
The origin of Idioms
Han Luo's Kaihe Ji in the Tang Dynasty said: "when the wind rises and falls one after another, it connects thousands of miles. From Daliang to huaijiang River, it goes on and on. When the brocade sails pass by, it smells a hundred miles."
Analysis of Idioms
Close synonym: Qi and Luo are connected
Idiom usage
As an object or attributive
Chinese PinYin : zhú lú xiāng jì
One after another
Gather the bone and blow the soul. liǎn gǔ chuí hún
everybody will be deterred by the danger. rén rén zì wēi
Cut down on the achievements and reserve the ability. fá gōng jīn néng
today we are no longer as we have been. jīn fēi xī bǐ
direct the spearhead against. fēng máng suǒ xiàng
sharpen one 's spear only before going into battle. lín zhèn mó qiāng