spy who reports on person 's doings
It is a Chinese word.
Pinyin: à RB à OSH é n
Interpretation: usually refers to the secret informer, folklore, attached to the ears of individual gods.
Entry
Ear for ear (ear for ear)
Pinyin
ěrbàoshén
Citation explanation
Secret Informer: Chapter 47 of a dream of Red Mansions: "you were so careful! I don't know if I'm here to be an informer or a spy. It's sneaky. It scares me Cao Xueqin's the 71st chapter of a dream of Red Mansions in the Qing Dynasty: "whose ear is this so fast?" Biography of heroes and Heroines: all over the place, his ears are telling the truth. How can he not know. Chapter 18 of Li Baojia's officialdom in the Qing Dynasty: every move of the imperial envoy Xingyuan is not unknown to the provincial Daxian. Since his two people are good friends, a group of informers have already rushed to Futai. The 29th chapter of the history of civilization: "I don't have an ear for news, just like you. You are looking at me in the light, and my eyes are black."
Related links
Eared God: in folklore, an immortal attached to the ear of an individual. People who have been alerted can know a lot about things that have not happened. He is usually a warlock, a false fortune teller, who tells others that he has been alerted, and then gives others the so-called prediction. It is usually used to explain that a person who makes a small report is someone else's ears and eyes
Chinese PinYin : ě bào shén
spy who reports on person 's doings
Supporting the young and supporting the old. xié yòu fú lǎo