coming in succession
It's a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y ú Gu à n é RR à, which means walking one after another like a fish. It's used to describe one entry after another. It comes from the biography of Deng AI.
Idiom usage
It's formal; it's predicate and attribute; it's commendatory. All the talented women were named after Bian and Meng. The 67th chapter of Jing Hua Yuan by Li Ruzhen in Qing Dynasty
The origin of Idioms
All the officers and men climbed up the cliff and entered by fish. Three Kingdoms · Wei Zhi · biography of Deng AI
Idiom story
In the Eastern Jin Dynasty, Yu Yi, the general of Nanchang, led his troops northward to recover the north, unify China and garrison Xiangyang. Fan Wang, an official under his command, wrote to Emperor Cheng of Jin Dynasty that the current task was to train troops, accumulate food and grass, and then launch the Northern Expedition when the time was ripe. He said: "when Mianyang and Han Dynasties dried up, they should move forward by pushing and pushing forward", opposing the northern expedition.
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym] orderly; antonym] swarmed in and broke in
coming in succession
run across an old friend in a distant land - tā xiāng gù zhī
Be modest and able to bear the talent - jīn néng fù cái
Vow to the mountain and the sea - shì shān méng hǎi
stand in the snow to wait upon master cheng respectfully - chéng mén lì xuě
the huanghe river is clear and the seas are calm - hé lián hǎi yàn