bode ill rather than well
As a Chinese idiom, Du ō Xi ō ngsh ǎ OJ í in pinyin means more harm than good luck. Yuan Wumingshi comes from "earn Kuai Tong".
The origin of Idioms
Yuan · anonymous's "earn Kuai Tong" second discount: "you go after more bad, less lucky, do so loyal."
Idiom usage
As predicate and attribute, it is the same as "more evil than good".
Examples
Close the cableway, I don't have to take care of the soil and water. I'm in a miasma. It's four o'clock. I don't know how. The series of Ming Chenghua talking and singing CI Hua Guan Suo demoted Yunnan biography.
Chinese PinYin : duō xiōng shǎo jí
bode ill rather than well
surge high and sweep forward. bō lù zhuàng kuò
Be generous in correcting mistakes. gǎi guò bù lìn
well-known mountains and rivers. míng shān shèng chuān
flying sand and rolling pebbles. fēi shā zǒu shí