Beat the chicken and curse the dog
Beating the chicken and cursing the dog, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is d ǎ J ī m à g ǒ u, which means abusing to vent one's dissatisfaction. From Lu Xun's hesitation soap.
Idiom explanation
Pronunciation D ǎ J ī m à g ǒ u interpretation metaphor to borrow a topic to play, or to vent dissatisfaction, or to make trouble.
Idioms and allusions
Source: Lu Xun's "hesitation · soap": "why do you have such a bad temper today? You even beat chickens and scold dogs at dinner." He works all day.
Discrimination of words
Synonym refer to mulberry and curse locust near meaning borrow a topic to play usage as predicate and attribute; same as "refer to mulberry and curse locust"
Chinese PinYin : dǎ jī mà gǒu
Beat the chicken and curse the dog
be confronted with a formidable enemy. dà dí dāng qián
destroy the old and establish the new. pò jiù lì xīn
The last leg of a journey marks the halfway point.. xíng bǎi lǐ zhě bàn jiǔ shí