Be unruly
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is f à ngdi à OS à P à, which means to use a set of tricky means; the description is extremely unreasonable. It's from Chen Zhou.
Notes on Idioms
Put: use; Diao: Rogue, cunning; saspo: unreasonable.
The origin of Idioms
The wedge of Chen Zhou Tan Mi written by Wu Mingshi in Yuan Dynasty: "I rely on my father's tiger power, take the rough and take the subtle, guess the crooked and pinch the strange, help others to be idle and lazy, and be unruly."
Idiom usage
It is used as predicate, object and attribute. How could old master Chen be willing to let it go? He didn't leave until Chao Liang paid him a thousand yuan. The ninety second chapter of Xingshi Yinyuan Zhuan
Chinese PinYin : fàng diāo sā pō
Be unruly
an unexpected or undeserved gain. tǎng lái zhī wù
entrust to another 's care the children one is about to leave behind as orphans. xíng gū jì mìng
Five classics sweep the floor. wǔ jīng sǎo dì