Move out of the valley
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Qi ā nqi á och ǔ, meaning the rise of people's status. The source is "happy reunion · happy news".
The origin of Idioms
Feng Menglong of the Ming Dynasty wrote in his "happy reunion · good news": "if I want to move out of the valley, I will leave Li Xuntao for another business." It is also called "moving the warbler out of the valley".
Chapter 106 of the strange situation witnessed in the past 20 years: "Fu mixuan moves the tiger away from the mountain, Jin Xiuying moves the warbler out of the valley."
Idiom explanation
It refers to the rise of people's status.
Move out of the valley
used figuratively for studying hard - chuān bì yǐn guāng
the happiness of a married couple deeply in love - yú fēi zhī lè