make oneself scarce
Liuzhihuye, whose pronunciation is Li ū zh ī h ū y ě, has the meaning of "slip away" (ironic and witty). It comes from the history of pain written by Wu 趼 Ren in Qing Dynasty.
To slip away (ironically or wittily). [source] the sixth chapter of the history of pain written by Wu Jianren in Qing Dynasty: "but he didn't say a word, so he went away." [example] the fifth chapter of Li Baojia's officialdom in the Qing Dynasty: "three pocketbooks, seeing this scene, chat up and then slip away." [usage] as predicate and object; used in spoken English
make oneself scarce
one 's beauty was such as to overthrow cities and ruin states - qīng guó qīng chéng
a great ability to rule the country - jīng guó zhī cái
continue walking in the old steps and seclude oneself - gù bù zì fēng
length of land on small picture - chǐ shān cùn shuǐ