one after another in close succession
Facing each other from shoulder to back, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Ji ā Nb è IXI ā NGW à ng, which means one after another. From the book with Li Gaotang and Chen Jiemei.
The origin of Idioms
Huang Zongxi's book with Li Gaotang and Chen Jiemei in the Qing Dynasty: "today's doctor in Fu Dan, my younger brother and regret wood boast, and there is no lack of face to face in your city."
Idiom usage
As a predicate or attribute; used in figurative sentences. In the past two thousand years, there have been great Confucianists and Confucianists looking at each other from shoulder to back. However, they have been confused by the salt. No one has ever been exposed to the evil. The injustice of Xue Xiansheng comes from the Confucianists. Kang Youwei's preface to the new study of the false classics
one after another in close succession
fit in exactly with one 's wishes - zhèng zhòng jǐ huái
To seek survival and harm benevolence - qiú shēng hài rén
Respect others and despise oneself - guì rén jiàn jǐ
A delayed remedy does not help in an emergency - yuǎn shuǐ bù jiù jìn huǒ
Eating with wind and eating with snow - cān fēng niè xuě