East and West are angry
In Chinese, the Pinyin is d à ngyu à nx à n à, which means to blame others at will. It comes from Yan's family precepts: save trouble.
The origin of Idioms
Yan Zhitui's "Yan Family Precepts · save things" in the Northern Qi Dynasty: "we must strive for competition, regardless of shame, compare our talents, measure our achievements, raise our voice in a fierce manner, and complain about things and things; some of us will be rewarded for supporting the prime minister's flaws, or others will be asked to see and send us when we are noisy. It's called talent to get an official. What's the difference between stealing food and clothing and getting warm?"
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate, an object, or an attribute; used in an attitude toward people.
Chinese PinYin : dōng yuàn xī nù
East and West are angry
prey upon one 's country and injure the people. dù guó bìng mín
a single spark can start a prairie fire. cuò huǒ liǎo yuán
Success or failure depends on this. chéng bài zài cǐ yī jǔ