voices of discontent
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is B ē ISH ē ngz à ID à o, which means that the sound of sad calls fills the road. To describe hardship. From the oath of duty.
Idiom explanation
The sound of a cry of grief filling the road. To describe hardship.
The origin of Idioms
Hong Xiuquan of the Taiping Heavenly Kingdom wrote in his oath of Duty: "women sigh and children cry, and their voices are full of sorrow; torture is thick and restrained, and they are full of resentment."
Idiom usage
It refers to suffering
Chinese PinYin : bēi shēng zài dào
voices of discontent
inscribe a debt of gratitude on one 's mind. lòu xīn kè gǔ
the very fowls and dogs have no peace. jī quǎn bù ān
there are able men everywhere. shí bù xiāng cǎo
kill a chicken with a butcher 's big knife. niú dāo gē jī