Changting guest
Changting guest, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is ch á NGT í ngzh ī K è, which means to go to the countryside (belonging to Huaiyin City, Jiangsu Province) to eat in Nanchang TingChang. It originally refers to Han Xin, the Marquis of Huaiyin in Han Dynasty, but later it refers to the person who has not met and is temporarily placed under the fence. From Hanshu · Hanxin Zhuan.
The origin of Idioms
Source: Hanshu · Hanxin biography: "Hanxin, a native of Huaiyin. A poor family has no business, so you can't choose to be an official From going to the countryside to Nanchang pavilion to eat
Idiom usage
As an object, it refers to a person who lives under the yoke of others. example if you are kind enough to cut off your stomach, you will leave Anyi's guests empty; if you are kind enough, you will always hate Changting's guests. Wang Bo's the second book of being a man and a father in Shu City
Chinese PinYin : cháng tíng zhī kè
Changting guest
when a rat runs across the street everybody cries , " kill it ! " -- a person hated by everyone. guò jiē lǎo shǔ
There is a clash between the two. àng yú xiāng jī
business with a small capital. xiǎo běn jīng yíng
with deep hatred and resentment. shāng xīn jí shǒu