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Idioms and proverbs about chickens
Idioms about chickens are:

Make a dog restless: describes that the noise is so loud that it is noisy and even makes a dog restless. Cockcrow and thief: refers to insignificant skills. It also means sneaking around. Trivial: a metaphor for trivial or worthless things. Stand out from the crowd: If you stand out from the crowd, it means that a person's appearance or talent stands out among the surrounding people. Chicken and dog bits and pieces: describe things in bits and pieces, not in pieces, and also refer to trivial matters. Chen Si: refers to the hen who announces the dawn. In the past, this was a metaphor for a woman stealing power and chaotic politics. Proverbs about chickens:

Stealing chickens without eating rice; A rotten chicken has a hard mouth; Hands can't tie chickens; Looking for bones in eggs; Marry a chicken with a chicken, marry a dog with a dog, one person gets the word, and the chicken and dog ascend to heaven. Two-part allegorical saying about chicken:

Chicken ass tied with rope, bullshit; Twenty-one days without chickens, bad guys; Rotten eggs cannot be poured; It's great to have a broom tied to the tail of a chicken. Fat chicken soup, rich in oil and water; Chicken catches mouse, it's a mess.