Make a fuss
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Cu ōē K ē D ǎ h 庸 ng, still say gag. The amusing action or language that an actor of traditional opera or quyi uses in his performance. It comes from Tang Xianzu's Nanke Ji manpai of Ming Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Tang Xianzu of the Ming Dynasty wrote in Nanke Ji manpai: "one of the most famous liuer in Yangzhou City in his own family is Liu er. A life of dissolute, half of romantic. But the unlucky people ask me to tease them. No matter how interesting the children are, they will do nothing with them. "
Idiom usage
In Ming and Tang Xianzu's Nanke Ji manpai: "a famous liuer in my Yangzhou city is. A life of dissolute, half of romantic. But the unlucky people ask me to tease them. No matter how interesting the children are, they will do nothing with them. "
Chinese PinYin : cuō kē dǎ hòng
Make a fuss
Millions buy houses, millions buy neighbors. bǎ wàn mǎi zhái,qiān wàn mǎi lín
hardships of travel or a hard life in the open country. cān fēng yǐn lù
transcend the worldly and be not gregarious. chāo rán bù qún
draw up three chapters of law. yuè fǎ sān zhāng