Climbing the scales
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is f ù J ì P ā NL í n, meaning to follow a famous person and become famous. From "Dai Xia Junfu banquet people's speech".
The origin of Idioms
Shi Huihong of the Song Dynasty wrote a poem called "the speech to the banquet of Xia Junfu:" the heart is always in the blue sky and the day, and the ambition of climbing the dragon is not destroyed. "
Idiom usage
Combined; used as predicate and attributive; with derogatory meaning; refers to relying on celebrities to become famous.
Climbing the scales
change tactics as the situation demands - suí shí zhì yí
freely flowing style of writing - xíng yún liú shuǐ
No double blessing, no single disaster - fú wú shuāng zhì,huò bù dān xíng
come straight to the point without the slightest hesitation - gān bā lì luò
infringe upon the prevalent social conventions - wéi shì jué sú
Peaches and plums speak for themselves - táo lǐ bù yán,xià zì chéng xī