be bound together in a common cause
Chinese idioms, Pinyin is Xi ū Q ī Xi ā nggu ā n. It means to describe a close relationship. It comes from Guoyu zhouyuxia.
Idiom explanation
Hugh: happy, auspicious; Qi: sad, sad. Happiness and happiness are related to each other. To describe a close relationship.
The origin of Idioms
"The state of Jin is full of worries, joys and joys For the sake of the Jin Dynasty, it's better not to memorize the origin. "
Idiom usage
It is closely related to each other
Examples
How can we entrust the wilderness to be exposed without any sense of solidarity. The fourth fold of Yuan Dynasty Shi Junbao's Qujiang pool
be bound together in a common cause
the dog of jie barked at yao-utterly unscrupulous in its zeal to serve its master - jié quǎn fèi yáo
considerate right down to the most trivial detail - wú wēi bù zhì