give off an unbearable stink
Stinking
[Pinyin] ch ò UB ù K ě D ā ng
When: bear. It stinks too much. It means that people have a bad reputation.
explicate
It can't be smelly. It stinks too much. It means that people have a bad reputation. [source] 1. In the book Donghai Ruo written by Liu Zongyuan of Tang Dynasty: "Donghai Ruo Lu You, if you visit Mengzhu, you will get two gourds. It's hard to smell when it's hard to shake its rhinoceros and play with it. It's hard to smell when it's hard to get rid of sea water and feces (2) the fifth chapter of Zeng Pu's "flowers of the evil sea" in the Qing Dynasty: "it turns out that the article that Gongfang thought was stinky that year was appraised by xialang, and Weike was encouraged. (3) the 90th chapter of romance of the Three Kingdoms by Luo Guanzhong of Ming Dynasty: "most of them were smashed in the face by iron cannons and died in the valley, stinking. "4. Pu Songling's strange tales from a lonely studio, a drunken maniac in Qing Dynasty:" vomit up the dark and dreary, stink. "
Examples and usage
[example] it turns out that the article Gongfang thought was stinky that year was appraised by xialang, and Weike was encouraged. (the fifth chapter of Nie Hai Hua by Zeng Pu in Qing Dynasty) [synonym] infamous and smelly [grammar] subject predicate; predicate and attributive; metaphor person's reputation is very bad [frequency] less use [generation time] Ancient idiom [part of speech] derogatory idiom [English translation] giveoffanunbearablestink
Chinese PinYin : chòu bù kě dāng
give off an unbearable stink
If you don't ask for anything, you'll find it. háo mò bù zhā,jiāng xún fǔ kē
wake up as one from a drunken sleep. rú zuì chū xǐng
He who follows me prospers, and he who goes against me perishes. shùn wǒ zhě chāng,nì wǒ zhě wáng
A hundred footed insect is not stiff until death. bǎi zú zhī chóng,zhì sǐ bù jiāng
keep thy shop and thy shop will keep thee.. huáng tiān bù fù yǒu xīn rén
Yizhou is a place of great power and splendor. lóng wēi shèng róng