Heel to shoulder rubbing
Heel to shoulder, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is "Zhangji ē Ji ā nm ó", which means too many people, crowded. It comes from the notes of shouyizhai · luhuahui written by Jin bangchang in Qing Dynasty.
Idiom usage
As predicate, attribute, adverbial
The origin of Idioms
In the notes of Shou Yi Zhai · Lu Hua Hui written by Jin Kuang Chang in Qing Dynasty, it is said that "suddenly the Jin drum is noisy, the Yi Wei is very prosperous, and the audience is following each other."
Idiom explanation
jostle one another on the way. Shoulder to shoulder, foot to foot. It's crowded.
Heel to shoulder rubbing
behaving stealthily like a thief - zéi tóu shǔ nǎo
Swallow the charcoal and paint the body - tūn tàn qī shēn
let the eye travel over the great scenes and let fancy free - yóu mù chěng huái
though seemingly always on the run , he accomplishes nothing - lù lù wú wéi
two blind men support each other - liǎng gǔ xiāng fú