jostle each other in a crowd
The Chinese idiom, Pinyin is m ó Ji ā NC ā zh ǒ ng, which means to describe a lot of pedestrians, very crowded. From Yanzi Chunqiu neipian zaxia.
The origin of Idioms
In Yanzi's spring and Autumn Annals, Nei Pian, Za Xia: "three hundred Lu in Linzi, Zhang Meicheng Yin, sweating and raining, are standing shoulder to shoulder."
Idiom usage
Example walking into Zhouzhuang "step on the arch bridge carefully, and Zhouzhuang stands in front of you: the streets, buildings and old houses are staggering, winding, and rushing towards you one after another. It seems that the water under the bridge is flowing like static. The streets are crowded with people.
jostle each other in a crowd
to compose poems while holding the lance horizontally in the saddle - héng shuò fù shī
hold sb . 's whip and follow his stirrup - zhí biān suí dèng