Haircut Dumen
Haircut Dumen, a Chinese word, Pinyin is Ji à NF à D à m é n, which means to be a monk with haircut and not to go out. It's from the tombstone of five.
Idiom explanation
Haircut: to cut off one's hair means to be a monk. I'm a monk with my hair cut.
The origin of Idioms
According to Zhang Pu's tombstone of five people in the Ming Dynasty, "if so, today's Gao Jue will appear. Once he has pleaded guilty or escaped, he can't live far or near. If he has a haircut Dumen and pretends that he doesn't know what he is doing, he will humiliate others. How serious is the death of five people?"
Haircut Dumen
Run like a wolf, run like a rabbit - láng bēn tù tuō
take into consideration both needs of the state and the interests of the collectives - tǒng chóu jiān gù
the lofty sentiments of fearing no hardships in the open - mù tiān xí dì