jostle each other
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is B ǐ Ji ā NJI ē J ì, which means shoulder to shoulder, footprints to each other, describes many people or continuous. It comes from the story of Xiuwen Sheren by Qu you of Ming Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Qu you of Ming Dynasty wrote "a new story of cutting lanterns, a biography of xiuwensheren": "a wise man died of being haggard, and a poor man appeared in the world."
Idiom explanation
Shoulder to shoulder, footprint to footprint. It is used to describe many people or one after another.
jostle each other
a loss may turn out to be a gain - sài wēng shī mǎ
The fish sink and the fish sink - yú chén hóng duàn
Sitting in the ring hanging Hall - zuò jǐng chuí táng