country sounds
Jiming and dogbarking, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is j ī m í ngqu ǎ NF è I, which means to describe a densely populated place. It's the same as "crowing of chickens and barking of dogs". It comes from the biography of Wu Liang in the book of the later Han Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
In the book of the later Han Dynasty, biography of Wu liangzhuan, Li Xian quoted the book of dongguanhanji as saying: "Qi county was defeated, bandits were separated, and the sound of chickens and dogs was not heard."
Idiom usage
For more than 250 years, Khitan began to talk about peace and harmony, and Deming was also constrained. However, there is no fear of crowing and barking in the world. Song Zeng Gong's "moving Cangzhou to the upper palace"
Analysis of Idioms
The sound of a chicken and the sound of a dog
country sounds
the meat-eaters are vulgar -- the noblemen are shortsighted and good-for-nothing - ròu shí zhě bǐ
The road is broken and the people are few - lù duàn rén xī
Anger comes from the heart, and evil comes from the gall - nù cóng xīn tóu qǐ,è xiàng dǎn biān shēng
honor the teacher and respect his teaching - zūn shī guì dào
A probe into the depth of history - tàn zé gōu shēn
be condemned out of one 's own mouth - lǐ qū cí qióng
restrict sb . 's activities to a designated area or sphere - huà dì chéng láo