Three in one
The Chinese idiom, Pinyin is s ā NR é NW è izh ò ng, which means that when the number reaches three people, they can be called many people. It comes from the preface of Gao HuiGao's posterity in the book of Han Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Ban Gu's preface to Gao HuiGao's posthumous meritorious officials in the history of the Han Dynasty: "although three people are in the public, they are hard to succeed, they should follow you gong."
Idiom usage
It refers to many people.
Examples
Selected works of Shi Lun in the ten years before the revolution of 1911: "if three people go together, there will be our teacher, and if three people are in the public, there will be a long way to go."
Three in one
Beat the bone and drain the marrow - chuí gǔ lì suǐ
what those above do , those below will imitate - zōu yīng qí zǐ