The tiger follows the Dragon
Huju Longpan, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is h ǔ J ù L ó NGP á n, which means to describe the majestic and dangerous terrain. It comes from the ode to the south of the Yangtze River.
Analysis of Idioms
It's like a tiger in a dragon's pan or a tiger in a dragon's pan
The origin of Idioms
In the Northern Zhou Dynasty, Gengxin's Ode to the south of the Yangtze River says, "in the past, the tiger was based on the Dragon pan, with the purple Qi of the yellow flag; all of them followed the fox and rabbit to cave in, and withered with the wind and dust."
Idiom usage
To describe the majestic and dangerous terrain.
The tiger follows the Dragon
read several lines at one glance - yī mù shù háng
have a hearty meal and sharpen one 's weapon -- get ready for fight - shèng shí lì bīng
people 's feelings change with the circumstances - qíng suí shì qiān
When people gather firewood, the flame is high - zhòng rén shí chái huǒ yàn gāo