Shoulder to shoulder
Jujuqi is a Chinese idiom. Its pronunciation is B ǐ Ji ā Nb ì ngq ǐ, which means to stand shoulder to shoulder together. It means to rise at the same time.
explain
Bi: No. Shoulder to shoulder. Metaphors come together at the same time. In the society, those who don't abide by the etiquette and the law, the thin and smart young people in the remote areas, are all beautiful and coquettish. They wear strange clothes and dress like women. They have the same complexion, manner and demeanor as women. There are many people like this: women do not want him to be their husband; unmarried women do not want him to be their fiance; they are willing to abandon their relatives and their families and elope with him.
source
Those who abandon their relatives and want to run are on a par. The allusion of Xunzi Feixiang: "today's disordered monarch in the secular world, the noisy son in the folk music, are all beautiful, Yao Ye, strange clothes, women's ornaments, blood, attitude, like women; women don't want to be husbands, virgins don't want to be scholars, those who abandon their relatives and want to run, stand shoulder to shoulder."
Discrimination of words
[structure] combination [age] Ancient [English] standupshouldertoshoulder
usage
The metaphor comes together at the same time
Shoulder to shoulder
cut off the long and compensate the short - cái cháng bǔ duǎn
give oneself a shake and change into another form - yáo shēn yī biàn
as the arm directing the fingers -- command with ease as one wishes - rú bì shǐ zhǐ
felicitous wish of making money - zhāo cái jìn bǎo