tell tales
It's a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is B ā NCH ú NN ò ngsh é, which means to stir up right and wrong. It's from the story of killing a dog, bitter admonition of reading a book.
The origin of Idioms
Xu Tianchen of Ming Dynasty wrote in the book of killing a dog, bitter admonition of reading a Book: "you can't believe it if you move your lips and make a fool of yourself
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: moving one's lips and speaking one's tongue; antonym: keeping silent
Idiom usage
It refers to deliberately stirring up right and wrong. Xu Dishan's the lonely star at the bottom of the Cape: "you scholars can only talk in front of women."
Chinese PinYin : bān chún nòng shé
tell tales
reach for what is beyond one 's grasp. chí gāo wù yuǎn
Helpless, the flowers fall. wú kě nài hé huā luò qù
unconventional ways of scholars. míng shì fēng liú
mountains and valleys change. líng gǔ biàn qiān
can compose and perform military exercises. shàn wén néng wǔ