Bees gather and ants gather
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is f ē ngcu á NY ǐ J ù, which means that people gather together like bees and ants. It comes from chapter 33 of the chronicles of the Eastern Zhou Dynasty by Feng Menglong of Ming Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
The 33rd chapter of the chronicles of the Eastern Zhou Dynasty written by Feng Menglong of the Ming Dynasty: "there are more than a thousand people following the king of Chu. One by one, all of them stripped off their clothes and exposed their armours, holding secret weapons in their hands, and rushing to the altar like a swarm of ants."
Idiom usage
When we get to the street, we can't help but swarm together. Wan son mother and daughter, each panic. The 13th chapter of the anonymous shuotang in Qing Dynasty
Bees gather and ants gather
achieve mastery through a comprehensive study of the subject - róng huì guàn tōng
friendship between persons regardless of their different economic situations - chǔ jiù jiāo
feel shame before heaven and fellow human beings - kuì tiān zuò rén
The dog and the fowl do not hear - jī quǎn bù wén