have a narrow escape from death
Escape from the tiger's mouth, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is h ǔ K ǒ ut á OSH ē ng, which refers to the life survived in the tiger's mouth. It means to escape from a very dangerous situation and survive. It comes from Zhuangzi's stealing Zhi.
Analysis of Idioms
For the rest of his life
Idiom usage
I'm here now. I'm in a hurry. I'm in a hurry. I'm in a hurry. The first fold of Wu Mingshi's cinnabar Dan in Yuan Dynasty
The origin of Idioms
Zhuangzi's stealing the paw: "Confucius said:" however, Qiu said that he had no disease, but he had to moxibustion himself. He walked quickly to get the head of the tiger and made up the beard of the tiger. It's hard to avoid the mouth of the tiger. "
have a narrow escape from death
be rapid in composary a piece of writing of a thousand words - yǐ mǎ qiān yán
as if one were waking from a dream - rú mèng fāng xǐng