get into a temper
It's a Chinese idiom,
Pinyin is B à oz à or ú L é I,
Phonetic notation: ㄅㄠㄗㄠㄖㄨㄨㄌㄟㄟ
Definition: describes the appearance of shouting when in a hurry.
It comes from ancient poems written by Jiao Zhongqing's wife.
idiom
get into a temper
Pinyin
bàozàorúléi
Citation explanation
"I have a father and brother, and my sexual behavior is as violent as thunder." Feng Menglong's Xingshi Hengyan · Qiao Taishou's Yuanyang spectrum: "because Yulang left, and she didn't want to give up her daughter, mother Liu was so angry that she didn't take off. When she saw her husband fall down, she complained a lot, and became furious." In Ming Dynasty, Feng Menglong's Xingshi Hengyan · Li Yuying's lawsuit in prison: "when Li Xiong saw the fighting like this, he was furious and made a lot of trouble." Feng Menglong of the Ming Dynasty wrote "a warning to the world: Zhao Taizu sent Jingniang thousands of miles away": "the young master was so anxious that he cried out:" the monks are pure and have nothing to do with the world. Why is there a woman locked in the hall? "" the fourth chapter of Wu Jingzi of the Qing Dynasty's scholars: "if you send them to the county, where can he stay? Now I'm just asking master Yan to be kind and to forgive him. " Yan Gongsheng became more and more furious.
Idiom usage
As a predicate, attributive, adverbial; refers to people's emotions
Analysis of Idioms
The synonym is furious
Chinese PinYin : bào zào rú léi
get into a temper