Cook dog hide bow
Cook dog hide bow, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is p ē NGG ǒ UC á NGG ō ng, which means to mean to abandon or even kill the person who works hard after the event. It comes from the family of Goujian, king of Yue in historical records.
The origin of Idioms
In historical records, the family of Goujian, king of Yue, Fan Li went and wrote a book from the official of Qi Dynasty, saying: "all the birds are gone, good bows are hidden, cunning rabbits are dead, and running dogs are cooking."
Idiom usage
Used as an object or attribute; used after the event. Example: in guangzhuang human world written by Yuan Hongdao of Ming Dynasty: "Zifang should be the world of cooking dogs and hiding bows, sometimes hidden and sometimes present, and ask Chisong to protect himself."
Cook dog hide bow
lower one 's banners and muffle one 's drums - yǎn qí pú gǔ
as far apart as heaven and earth - tiān rǎng zhī gé
make use of an opportunity to achieve one 's end - shùn shuǐ tuī zhōu