a disorderly band
The Chinese idiom, w ǎ h é zh ī Z ú in pinyin, means an unorganized army. It comes from the biography of Li Shiqi in Hanshu.
Idiom usage
To be an object; refer to a mob
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: Mob
The origin of Idioms
In the biography of Li Shiqi in the book of Han Dynasty, "Shiqi said," it's the so-called person who explores the mouth of the tiger who starts to fight with each other, takes up scattered troops, is dissatisfied with ten thousand people, and wants to enter the strong Qin Dynasty. "
Idiom explanation
Tile combination: the broken tiles are combined. Soldier: soldier. Soldiers who scrape together like broken tiles. It's a metaphor for an unorganized army.
a disorderly band
roar out a somber song instead of crying - cháng gē dàng kū
swallow the voice and hold the breath - tūn shēng yǐn hèn
give mature consideration to all aspects of a question - miàn miàn yuán dào