spectators stood round like a wall
The Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Gu ā nzh ě ch é NGD ǔ, which means a large number of viewers. It comes from the Ming Dynasty Shen Bang's Wanshu Zaji temple.
Idiom usage
It is used as attributive and adverbial to describe a large number of viewers
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms: the crowd of viewers, the mountain of viewers, the crowd of viewers
The origin of Idioms
According to the Ming Dynasty Shen Bang's "Wanshu Zaji · Temple", it can be seen that his purple shirt and clothes are patched up, and his stick is hung with beads, crisscrossing the thoroughfare of Yan City, where the saying is Yan Le, and the audience is blocked up
Idiom explanation
It describes a large number of viewers. It's the same as "the crowd is full of spectators".
spectators stood round like a wall
a nobleman makes his tour in disguise - bái lóng yú fú
A wife who has shared her husband's hard lot must never be cast aside. - zāo kāng zhī qī bù xià táng