Pluck one's teeth
Pozuzuanliao, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is B ō Zu ǐ Li á oy á, which means to stir up right and wrong. It comes from the Peony Pavilion.
The origin of Idioms
Tang Xianzu of the Ming Dynasty wrote in the Peony Pavilion: there is a Polygonum Valley in the middle. The Ming Dynasty helped the fan family to fight the Han family. In the middle of a communication, you have to pick your teeth. "
Idiom usage
It is used as predicate to describe gossip.
Chinese PinYin : bō zuǐ liáo yá
Pluck one's teeth
The Phoenix is separated from the Phoenix. luán fēn fèng lí
overindulge oneself in wine and women. chén miǎn jiǔ sè
There is an unexpected situation in the sky, and there is a blessing and misfortune in people. tiān yǒu bù cè fēngyún,dì yǒu dàn xī huòfú
by juggling with deceit made it real. nòng jiǎ chéng zhēn