travel incognito
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is w ē if ú s ī x í ng, which means that the emperor or officials put on civilian clothes to secretly visit the people or difficult cases. It comes from Ming Feng Ji, Yan Zhao contending for favor, written by Wang Shizhen of Ming Dynasty.
Idiom usage
As predicate, object, etc
Analysis of Idioms
Close synonym: Weifu private visit
The origin of Idioms
In Ming Dynasty, Wang Shizhen's Ming Feng Ji Yan Zhao contending for favor said, "this trip is just to collect some glory. You can't go away with cheers. You have to do it in private."
Idiom explanation
Micro clothing: civilian clothing. Private travel: private travel. It used to mean that emperors or officials put on civilian clothes and secretly went to the people to visit the people or difficult and serious cases.
travel incognito
be a restless fellow like a drifting water plant - fú zōng làng jì
Two peaches kill three scholars - èr táo shā sān shì