close the door
Shut the door, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Shu ā nm é Nb ì h ù, meaning shut the door. It comes from Li Yu's five tigers March to the West in Qing Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
The 67th chapter of "five tigers March to the west" written by Li Yutang in the Qing Dynasty: "I waited until the sun set. After dinner, I did not sit on horses. I took eight platoons and walked quietly on foot. Half an hour later, I arrived at Tianwang temple. When it's the second shift, most of the left and right families are closed, and the garden is silent. "
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym]: closed door [antonym]: open door
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate, object, attribute; used in a cold scene
close the door
stratagem of making the enemy conceited by showing weakness - jiāo bīng zhī jì