A bee and a pig
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is f ē NGH é sh ǐ t ū, which means like a swarm of bees gathering, like a wild boar rushing. It refers to people rushing together. It comes from Liu Ji of Ming Dynasty.
Idiom usage
As predicate, object, attribute; used in figurative sentences
The origin of Idioms
Liu Ji of the Ming Dynasty wrote in the book of the spring and Autumn Annals of the Ming Dynasty, the Duke of the Qi Dynasty defeated Xu in loulin: "today, it is not the case. The reality of China is in the eyes of the Chu people! So Jinghu took a trip to Guangzhou, and they fought with each other to defeat Xu in loulin. "
Idiom explanation
Like a swarm of bees, like a wild boar. It's a metaphor for people rushing together.
A bee and a pig
analyze and decide like water flowing -- decide cases promptly - pōu jué rú liú
rack one 's brains for ingenious devices - qiǎo lì míng sè
look forward with eager expectancy - yǎn chuān cháng duàn
the only way which must be passed - bì jīng zhī lù