The owl talks
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is ch ī Xi ā on ò ngsh é, which means villains play with right and wrong to show off. It comes from Yuan Dynasty's Wumingshi's lianhuanji.
essential information
It is pronounced ch ī Xi ā on ò ngsh é , meaning owl: a kind of bird like owl, which refers to a villain. Owls show off their tongue. It refers to a villain playing with right and wrong to show off. He is from the third fold of Yuan Dynasty's Wu Mingshi's lianhuanji: "it's a waste of your power, your loyalty, your peace, and your tolerance to the owl's tongue, the crow's wings, and your strong match with the Phoenix."
Idiom information
commonly used degree: General emotional color: derogatory words grammatical usage: as object; refers to show off idiom structure: subject predicate type generation time: ancient times
Chinese PinYin : chī xiāo nòng shé
The owl talks
dragons and snakes follow one 's writing brush -- good penmanship. bǐ dǐ lóng shé
Divide the grass and the soil. fēn máo zuò tǔ