Out of the woods
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is ch ū y ō ush ē NGG ā o, which means to go out of the valley to move a Qiao; it refers to the improvement of a person's situation or the promotion of a position. From the book of the later Han Dynasty, biography of the scholars, Yang Lun.
Idioms and allusions
Fan Ye of the Southern Song Dynasty wrote in the book of the later Han Dynasty, biography of the scholars, Yang Lun: "the emperor issued an imperial edict, saying:" when the emperor came out, he favored the vassal Fu, missed the king's orders, was good at stopping the road, took care of his illness, and indulged in his ambition. " Li Xian quoted the poem: "out of the valley, up in the trees."
Discrimination of words
To be away from home and to be away from home
Chinese PinYin : chū yōu shēng gāo
Out of the woods
spread out and scatter about like stars in the sky or chessman on the chessboard. qí bù xīng luó
introspect on one 's own accord and listen to other 's views. nèi shì fǎn tīng
want to reach a high position -- like a stork hovering on high and crying proudly. féi dùn míng gāo