People come and go
People come and go, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is R é NL á IK è Q ù, which means polite social intercourse. It comes from Sikongtu's four poems of Nanzhi in Tang Dynasty.
Idiom explanation
It refers to formal social intercourse. It also means a lot of guests.
The origin of Idioms
In Sikongtu's "four poems of the South", it is said that "people should be discussed when they come and go. Don't send others as masters." Cao Xueqin's the first ten chapters of "a dream of Red Mansions" in the Qing Dynasty: "mother, go to sleep, people come and go all day long, have a rest."
People come and go
stamp one 's feet and beat one 's chest in bitterness - diē jiǎo chuí xiōng
Shaking the earth and shaking the sky - hàn dì yáo tiān
retreat about thirty miles as a condition for peace - tuì bì sān shè
with fame spreading far and wide - míng wén xiá ěr
when one chu man loses his bow , another chu man finds it - chǔ gōng chǔ dé