invisible
Yin Jie Zang Xing, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y ǐ NJI è C á NGX í ng, which means to hide the body and make it invisible. From the romance of the Three Kingdoms.
Idiom usage
To hide; hide
The origin of Idioms
Chapter 21 of the romance of the Three Kingdoms by Luo Guanzhong of the Ming Dynasty: "the dragon can be big and small, can rise and hide, big can raise clouds and spit fog, small can hide."
invisible
abolish punishment with punishment - yǐ xíng zhǐ xíng
eagerly crane and retract one's neck - tàn tóu suō nǎo