The fly of the trooper
The Chinese idiom, Tu ō J ì zh ī y í ng in pinyin, means to refer to a person who can show his name after following a virtuous person. It comes from the biography of Kaiqi in the later Han Dynasty.
Idiom explanation
It refers to a person who is famous after following the virtuous.
The origin of Idioms
According to the biography of Kaiqi in the book of the later Han Dynasty, "the emperor wrote in calligraphy and said:" Mu Le De Yi, Si Xiang Jie Na If you count the price of Meng bole, the fly will fly only a few steps, that is to say, it will take the tail of the steed to be superior. " Li Xianzhu: "Zhang Zhuangshu said:" the flight of a fly is only ten steps. It is a long way from the end of a steed. However, it does not damage the Qi and Ji, so it is necessary to make the flies unique
Idiom usage
As an object; often used in figurative sentences
Examples
For example, when a mountain falls, a Russian philosopher dreams of laying a stone between two couplets. He wants to be a lost dog. Xu Heng, Yuan Dynasty
The fly of the trooper
Xiang Zhuang's sword dance is aimed at Peigong - xiàng zhuāng wǔ jiàn,yì zài pèi gōng
This is tolerable, which is intolerable - cǐ ér kě rěn ,shú bù kě rěn
be the same in essentials while differing in minor points - dà tóng xiǎo yì