The pheasant scurrying in a flurry
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is zh ì f ú sh ǔ Cu à n, which means to hide in fear and flee in panic. From the northwest frontier affairs.
The origin of Idioms
Li Dongyang of the Ming Dynasty wrote in his northwest border preparation petition that "the imperial court ordered the general to leave the army, and heaven's power came, and the pheasants were fleeing, and there was no one left."
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate, attribute, or adverbial; used in writing
The pheasant scurrying in a flurry
promote what is fundamental and suppress what is incidental - chóng běn yì mò
there is no secret about one 's movements - lái qù fēn míng
be scattered to the four corners of the earth - tiān gè yī fāng