Pretending to be a tiger
Feihu Zhangwei, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Ji ǎ h ǔ zh ā NGW ē I, which means to intimidate others with their prestige. It comes from qunyin Lei Xuan, Zhongxiao Ji and Yu Jianzhang by Hu Wenhuan of Ming Dynasty.
Idiom usage
I don't know how to end up in the future.
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: Fox pretends to be tiger
The origin of Idioms
Hu Wenhuan of Ming Dynasty wrote in Qun Yin Lei Xuan, Zhong Xiao Ji, Yu Jian Zhang: "we should try our best to gain fame and keep prestige."
Idiom explanation
False: borrow. Intimidate others with their prestige.
Pretending to be a tiger
Catch the shadow and catch the wind - zhuō yǐng bǔ fēng
feel as if a knife were piercing one 's heart - xīn rú dāo gē
use inferior materials and turn out substandard goods - tōu gōng jiǎn liào
gloomy eyebrows and wrinkled forehead -- knit the brows - chóu méi cù é
The heart of a villain is the belly of a gentleman - yǐ xiǎo rén zhī xīn,duó jūn zǐ zhī fù
fit in exactly with one's wishes - zhèng zhòng xià huái