come in a throng
Synonyms come in droves, which generally refers to droves. Droves is a Chinese idiom. Pinyin is f ē nzh ì t à L á I, which means that adjectives come one after another, continuously. It is often used to refer to people. From Zhu Xi's answer to he Shujing in Song Dynasty.
Idiom usage
After putting up the notice, I was sitting in the recruitment office, and I saw the young men, who were busy. Gao Yang's the second volume of Qing palace history
The origin of Idioms
The sixth chapter of Zhu Xi's answer to he Shujing in Song Dynasty: "my husband's heart seems to be solemn. If something happens, even though things come in great numbers, it's not enough to disturb my thinking."
Idiom story
During the Southern Song Dynasty, the Jin soldiers invaded the border, and the LongTuge was under control. Wang Gang guarded Sichuan. Due to the frequent wars and various kinds of documents pouring in, he calmly dealt with the documents according to their priorities. He had personally supervised the war, arranged for Wu Li and Zhang Zhengyan to attack Jin Bing and won a great victory, but he was not proud of himself.
come continually
distant and indistinct ; vague ; misty - miǎo miǎo máng máng
a place just big enough to get the knees in - róng xī zhī dì
just a flourish of the pen and it 's done - yī huī ér jiù
discard the old ways of life in favour of the new - gé jiù dǐng xīn