disguise oneself
Qiaozhuang Gaidai is a Chinese idiom. Pinyin is Qi á ozhu ā NGG ǎ IB à n, which means that make-up changes the image and conceals the original identity. It is also called "disguise" or "disguise". From the three heroes and five righteousness.
Notes on Idioms
Joe: fake. Qiao Makeup: change clothes and face.
The origin of Idioms
Chapter 77 of three chivalrous men and five righteousness by Shi Yukun in Qing Dynasty: (Bai Yutang) he disguised himself as a gentle scholar, wearing a square scarf and a flowery cloak. He stepped out of the shop with a pair of thick bottomed red shoes and a clay gold folding fan in his hand.
Idiom usage
As predicate, object, attribute, adverbial; refers to disguise. Chapter 12 of the Qing Dynasty's anonymous case of Liu Gong: "I'm going to Shilibao today. I'm going to visit the people in disguise."
disguise oneself
flags and emblems of a high official - gāo yá dà dào
dream of being a successful writer - mèng bǐ shēng huā
Nine tripods are not enough - jiǔ dǐng bù zú wéi zhòng
Hold one's hair and eat one's dinner - wò fā tǔ sūn
eat sparingly because of poverty - duàn jī kuài zhōu
spit out a mouthful in the middle of eating and bind up one 's hair in the midst of a bath in order to see visitors - tǔ bǔ wò fà