traces left by chariot and horse
The Chinese idiom ch ē zh é m ǎ J ì in pinyin refers to the traces of horses and carts. From: Zuo Zhuan, the twelfth year of Zhaogong.
Idiom explanation
[idiom] traces of vehicles and horses [phonetic] ch ē zh é m ǎ J ì [interpretation] refers to the traces of vehicles and horses.
Idioms and allusions
In the past, if the king of Mu wanted to be reckless and travel around the world in Zhou Dynasty, there would be traces of cars and horses. Examples of idioms in the twelfth year of Zhaogong in Zuozhuan: the wind blows, the rain freezes, and the thieves are better than the pioneers; the tracks of cars and frogs are everywhere. Old book of the Tang Dynasty: biography of Li mi
Discrimination of words
[usage] as object and attributive, it refers to the trace left by structure combination age ancient rutmadeby passing vehicles and prints left by horses'hoofs near synonyms car dust and horses rhyme words unquestionable, stubborn and cowardly, powerless, calm, hard work and tree art, never give up the curtain, tired of driving, hard work, extreme, make great efforts
traces left by chariot and horse
fawn upon the rich and powerful persons - qū quán fù shì
not to cause the slightest damage to the people - bǐ chàng wú jīng
beautiful rivers and mountains of a country - dà hǎo hé shān
fond of showing off one's contributions - jīn gōng zì fá