Behind closed doors
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is B ì m é ns ǎ Ogu ǐ, which usually refers to stopping guests and not communicating with them. It comes from Du MI, the biography of Danggu in the later Han Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Du MI, the biography of Danggu in the book of the later Han Dynasty: "Liu Sheng, a member of the same county, also went back to his hometown from Shu county. He closed his door and had nothing to do." Li Xian's note: "the track, the car track. It's not about human resources. "
Idiom usage
It means not to communicate with the outside world.
Analysis of Idioms
Close door
Behind closed doors
relay on hearsay instead of seeing for oneself - yǐ ěr wéi mù
lay down weapons and strip off armour - dǎo gē xiè jiǎ
low prices for grain hurt the peasants - gǔ jiàn shāng nóng
Be aware of people and the world - jué rén jué shì
build bridges across the rivers - yù shuǐ dié qiáo