Drow alone
Zhuo Er Du Xing is a Chinese idiom. Its pinyin is Zhu ó ě Rd ú x í ng, which means to surpass others and not go with the crowd. It comes from the biography of King Gong of Donghai in the later Han Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
According to the biography of King donghaigong in the later Han Dynasty, "Wang Gongqian was good at propriety, and ended up with virtue. He sent his goods from the province, his clothes were full of shape, his chariots were covered with earthenware, and his goods were reduced to the system, so as to show the king's ambition of going alone." Li Xianzhu: "the former book says:" those who are outstanding are close to the king of Hejian. "
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attributive; used in writing.
Chinese PinYin : zhuó ěr dú xíng
Drow alone
Every man sweeps the snow before his door, never mind the frost on others' tiles. gèrénzìsǎo ménqiánxuě,mòguǎntārén wǎshàngshuāng
give full play to one 's imagination. hú cāi luàn xiǎng