Push wheel
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is p ě NGG ǔ Tu ī L ú n, which means the grand courtesy of the ancient emperors when appointing generals. It comes from Pinghua in the spring and Autumn period of the seven kingdoms.
Idiom explanation
Hold the hub and push the cart forward. The ceremonious treatment of ancient emperors when appointing generals.
The origin of Idioms
In the volume of Pinghua in the spring and Autumn period of the seven kingdoms, "the king of Yan and his ministers held the wheel and invited Yue Yi to the golden platform. He was honored by all the officials of the emperor and signed with Yue Yi as commander-in-chief."
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or object; used in writing
Examples
Once he met the Han Emperor, he built a altar to worship the general, held the wheel and pushed the wheel, and later granted the title of Wang Jue in return for his service. The thirty first volume of Yu Shi Ming Yan by Feng Menglong in Ming Dynasty
Push wheel
the woman in her thirty-forties - xú niáng bàn lǎo
one 's power has been transferred into the hands of others - dà quán páng luò
tigers howl with the rise of winds - hǔ xiào fēng shēng
unjust cause finds scant support - shī dào guǎ zhù