stop clamoring
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y ǎ NQ í x ī g ǔ, meaning to roll up the flag and stop beating the drums. It refers to the covert action of the army to avoid exposing the target and to stop the action. It comes from Zhang Xianzhong, a vagrant in the history of Ming Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Zhang Xianzhong, a vagrant biography in the history of the Ming Dynasty, said: "Xianzhong, because he had to eat rice cheese with salt in Shanmin City, gathered and scattered, hid his banner and bowed, and went west to Baiyang mountain."
Analysis of Idioms
Stop and stop
Idiom usage
Chapter six of a dream of Red Mansions: "after listening to Qin Xian's story, his soul was blown away and he was dejected. He immediately hid his banner and went away." Qu Qiubai's hungry hometown chronicle 13: "Liu Shouqing scolded them again, and then he went on hiding his banner. “
stop clamoring
Ambition is not in high school - yǒu zhì bù zài nián gāo
Hidden willows and hidden flowers - liǔ àn huā zhē
in a strange land , do as the natives do - suí xiāng rù xiāng
sharpen one 's sword and oil one 's gun - mó dāo cā qiāng
There is something to be said later - tuì yǒu hòu yán