tawdry to squabble over nothing
Bare tongue, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is ch ì K ǒ UB á ISH é, which means to describe the vicious language, hurtful. From eclipse.
Idiom explanation
Red: fire red.
The origin of Idioms
Lu Tong's poem "eclipse of the moon" said: "the bird is a resident, the master is not aware of, greedy to who's home, the line of mouth poison, poison tongue but eat the moon, do not peck to kill."
Idiom usage
It refers to the vicious language.
Examples
"Guangling tide" Chapter 25: "I dare not have the real evidence, blatant talk in vain about others?"
If we worship our ancestors on the day, we will not punish those who speak red and white. The 28th chapter of Xia Jingqu's Ye sou Pao Yan in Qing Dynasty
Chinese PinYin : chì kǒu bái shé
tawdry to squabble over nothing
insist on doing evil without repentance. wéi è bù quān