Zhang Yiju
Zhang Yiju, a Chinese idiom, is ch ī zh ā ngy ǐ J ù in pinyin, which means that he is arrogant and ants gather. It comes from Quan Deyu of Tang Dynasty, an inscription on the Shinto of shaobaoyigong, the prince of Nanchong, who is the right servant and right guard General of Guanglu in Tang Dynasty.
Idiom usage
Used as a metaphor or attribute; used of written language
The origin of Idioms
The preface of Quan Deyu's "the epitaph on the Shinto of the prince Shaobao Yigong given by Nanchong county king, the right servant and right guard General of Guanglu in the Tang Dynasty" reads: "Su Huan, the counsellor of Huang, Wang Mingyue, the cavalry general, and Zhang Yiju are all victims of misfortune."
Idiom explanation
It is used to refer to the arrogance of a bird and the gathering of ants.
Chinese PinYin : chī zhāng yǐ jù
Zhang Yiju
stamp one 's feet and beat one 's breast. dùn zú chuí xiōng
jostle and elbow one's way. héng chōng zhí chuǎng
hid work in the mountains and pass to like-minded people. cáng zhū míng shān