desperado
The Chinese idiom, B ù ch ě ngzh ī t ú in pinyin, means a person who makes trouble because of his dissatisfaction. It comes from Zuozhuan, the tenth year of Xianggong.
The origin of Idioms
In Zuozhuan Xianggong decade written by Zuo Qiuming in the pre Qin period, it is said that "the Si, Du, Hou and Zishi families all died in the field, so the five families gathered together to make trouble because of their disciples."
Idiom usage
As the subject or object, it refers to a criminal or a person who intends to make trouble. example if there is a villain who pretends to trust the people's army to disturb public order, he is the public enemy of the people. Chapter 68 of the popular romance of the Republic of China by Cai Dongfan and Xu Xun's father.
Chinese PinYin : bù chěng zhī tú
desperado
there are able men everywhere. shí bù xiāng cǎo