tie one 's hands at the back and take a coffin with him -- give up resistance and ask for punishment
Mian tie Yu 榇, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is mi à NF ù y ú ch è n, which means no longer resist, please be punished, this is the ancient monarch surrender ceremony. It comes from Zuo Zhuan, the sixth year of Duke Fu.
Idiom explanation
Face binding: binding hands to the winner instead, to give up resistance; Yu Yu: loading the coffin in the car.
The origin of Idioms
In Zuozhuan, the sixth year of the Duke of Chu, it is said that "Xu Nan's face is bound with a bit of jade, the doctor's declining classics, and the scholar's public opinion."
Idiom usage
To surrender in a war. The next day, Wei arrived. Later, he led the princes and more than 60 officials to come down ten li from the north gate. The 18th chapter of romance of the Three Kingdoms by Luo Guanzhong in Ming Dynasty and the biography of Deng AI in the history of the Three Kingdoms by Wei Shu: "when AI arrived in Chengdu, Zen led more than 60 princes and ministers to reach the army."
tie one 's hands at the back and take a coffin with him -- give up resistance and ask for punishment
If one does not press the crowd, one hundred will not follow one - yī bù yā zhòng,bǎi bù suí yī
Divide the grass and give the earth - fēn máo cì tǔ
check erroneous ideas at the outset - fáng wēi dù xìn
regard oneself head and shoulders above others - gāo rén yī děng