go in a jostling crowd
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is "Iji ā NC ā B è I", which means shoulder to shoulder, back to back, describes the crowd. It's from a warning to the world.
The origin of Idioms
Feng Menglong of the Ming Dynasty, the 13th volume of the general statement of warning the world: "hang the cards at the gate of the county, stir up the private bodies of the officials in the front and back of the county, wipe their backs on each other, just to be greedy for the reward, they all come to gamble for the first time. Ling Mengchu's "the first time to make a surprise" Volume 32: "every day and night, scholars and women noisy, thick people, shoulder to shoulder.
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym] shoulder to shoulder, shoulder to shoulder, shoulder to shoulder, sea of people, shoulder to shoulder
Idiom usage
It's a very crowded scene
go in a jostling crowd
When the water is clear, there is no fish - shuǐ zhì qīng wú yú
restrict sb . 's activities to a designated area or sphere - huà dì chéng láo
an outspoken minister who gives unpleasant advice - gǔ gěng zhī chén