hide a malicious intent
It is a Chinese idiom. Pinyin is B ā OC á nghu ò x ī n, which means that one has evil intentions in mind. It comes from Zuo Zhuan Zhao ad.
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym] Buddha's tongue and snake's heart, evil intentions and [antonym] Bodhisattva's heart and mind are magnanimous
The origin of Idioms
"Zuo Zhuan · Zhao ad Nian:" a small country is innocent and depends on its crime; it will depend on the peace and tranquility of a big country, but not on the evil intention. "
Idiom usage
It is used as predicate and object to describe the appearance of a person who does harm in secret. Example: Luo Binwang's "on behalf of Li Jingye to discuss martial arts": after the Yuan Dynasty, he was in Huizhai and trapped my king in juyu. He took the cobra and lizard as his heart, and became a jackal. He was close to evil, and killed Zhongliang, his elder sister, his elder brother, his king and his mother. Man and God are jealous of each other, but heaven and earth are not. Youfu harbors evil intentions and steals artifact. Liu Ji of Ming Dynasty's Yu ziqiao harbors evil intentions: a gentleman says Xiguo ziqiao is not a human being. If he has already done so, he will not be careful to insult himself and hide his evil intention in order to trap his friends! At the beginning of my life, I was a guest. I didn't want to return my blood. Now I'm willing to get it. What's my father? Pu Songling's Liao Zhai Zhi Yi Liu Shi Zi in Qing Dynasty
Chinese PinYin : bāo cáng huò xīn
hide a malicious intent
a single thread can 't make a cord. dān sī bù xiàn
flying sand and rolling pebbles. fēi shā zǒu shí
all that have been achieved is spoiled. qián gōng jìn miè