Sword head
Sword head, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is d à ot ó Uji à NSH à u, meaning extremely dangerous situation. It comes from Qian Qianyi's six poems on Ding Chou written by Wu Zide in Tiao, Qing Dynasty.
Idiom usage
As an object or attribute; used of a situation
Analysis of Idioms
Sword mountain and sword forest
The origin of Idioms
Qian Qianyi of Qing Dynasty wrote six poems about Ding Chou written by Wu Zide and Yu on the sweet potato. He was happy with the gradual solution of his prison because he was sad about Yu's arrest. He also felt that he was reconciled with it. The fifth part: "the sword has its first winter and spring. If you want to kill it, you should have a hundred bodies."
Idiom explanation
It is a metaphor for a dangerous situation.
Chinese PinYin : dāo tóu jiàn shǒu
Sword head
become a custom through long time usage. xiāng yán chéng xí
The shoulder follows the tooth. jiān cóng chǐ xù
so full of hatred that each wants to get the other 's head. mào shǒu zhī chóu