crowd of spectators
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Gu ā nzh ě R ú y ú n, which means that people watching are as dense as clouds. There are so many people around. It comes from Liu Yuxi's book about the moon altar on the night of Jianci in Tang Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Liu Yuxi, Tang Dynasty, wrote in his book "the story of Jianci xiyuetan": "in the autumn light, you can see Fengcheng like clouds."
Analysis of Idioms
A crowd of spectators
Idiom usage
In Song Dynasty, Zhang Junfang's the seven signatures of the cloud collection, volume 113: "Yan Shi is king Xiang's call to drink, and only when he wants to get drunk can he return.". The view of the riverside is like clouds. "
crowd of spectators
blindly copying others and making oneself look foolish - dōng shī xiào pín
make vigorous efforts to achieve prosperity - lì jīng tú zhì
abuse outrageously and without any restraint - sì yán lì rǔ
follow suit without knowing why - ǎi zǐ guān cháng