Fight on stilts
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Qi à oz ú K à ngsh à u, which means dancing. It comes from the preface to the 60th birthday of xuangaogong, a scholar as a teacher, written by Zhang Juzheng of Ming Dynasty.
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate, attribute, or adverbial; used in writing
Analysis of Idioms
Dancing and dancing
The origin of Idioms
Zhang Juzheng's preface to the 60th birthday of xuangaogong, a scholar as a teacher, said: "today, Ziji's life is to forgive the secret, which one is better than chengwangxian, whose appointed Duke is not under Zhougong, so both at home and abroad are competing to praise Shengde."
Idiom explanation
Dancing.
Fight on stilts
be very hard up , and in fact ) be at a loose end - shí guāi yùn guāi
He who is close to Zhu is red, and he who is close to Mo is black - jìn zhū zhě chì,jìn mò zhě hēi
a woman who is unfaithful to her husband - bù ān yú shì
untidy appearance with prisoner 's unkempt hair and unwashed face - qiú shǒu sàng miàn