insolent
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is à on à y à Qi è, which means to see everything with an oblique eye. Describe arrogance and contempt for everything. It comes from Yu Xiu's Ode to the old Qing poetry.
Analysis of Idioms
Be proud of everything; be modest and cautious
The origin of Idioms
Huang Tingjian, Song Dynasty, wrote in Yu Xiu's Ode to the old Qing Dynasty's poems in Yuzhang anthology vol.2-16: "the old Qing Dynasty learned from Lianshui together with Yu. He was arrogant and arrogant in all things, funny in order to play with the world, and the white head was not sad.".
Idiom usage
The verb object type is used as predicate and has a derogatory meaning. Chapter 102 of Wu Jianren's the strange situation witnessed in 20 years in Qing Dynasty: "when he was popular, he was arrogant. There was no one in his eyes." After he got a little success, he began to work. What's more, he's a bohemian. He's a child. Wei xiuren's the first chapter of Hua Yue Chen in Qing Dynasty
Chinese PinYin : ào nì yī qiè
insolent
do sth. with consummate skill. xīn xián shǒu mǐn
hundred generations of root and branches. běn zhī bǒi shì
with scornful words and jeering smiles. xuè làng xiào áo
The wind and rain are like a dish. fēng yǔ rú pán
carry out a capital punishment. míng zhèng diǎn xíng