Explanation: False: Borrow. The fox pretended to be a tiger. Metaphor relies on the strength of others to bully others.
From: "The Warring States Policy Chu Ce I": "The tiger seeks all kinds of animals and eats them, and it gets its fox. ..... The tiger thought so, too, and followed. When the beast saw it, he walked away, but the tiger didn't know that the beast was afraid of himself and thought he was afraid of the fox. "
Ex.: Sure enough, the government came to borrow it, so why not? I'm afraid I'll be trusted by others, but it won't protect him.
◎ Ming Lingmeng's "Two Moments of Surprise" Volume 20
Grammar: subject-predicate type; As predicate, attribute and object; derogatory sense
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Encyclopedia explanation
Smith, a fable of the Han nationality in the pre-Qin period. The fox used the tiger's threat to scare away all the animals. Later, the metaphor of "Smith" was used to bully and intimidate people by relying on or relying on the strength of others. From "Warring States Policy Chu Ce I". See more >>
antonym
Synonym: bully others, the dog fights the situation.
Antonym: be unique and win the game.