malicious gossip
In Chinese, Pinyin is f ē IDU ǎ NLI ú ch á ng, which means spreading rumors and slandering others. From the preface of sending Han Beizhu to Jiangxi.
The origin of Idioms
Shen Yazhi's preface to sending Han Beizhu to Jiangxi Province in Tang Dynasty: "therefore, there is flattery and slander with small volume, which is destroyed by the foundation. In the neighboring areas, it is more effective to smile, and the flow is short and the world hears it.
Idiom usage
It's hard for me to accept the fact that I have to keep a secret when I come here. Pu Songling's strange tales from a lonely studio fengsanniang in Qing Dynasty
Idiom story
Once upon a time, there was a beautiful woman named fan shi1niang who once met a beautiful woman named Feng Sanniang at a temple fair. Feng Sanniang didn't go, so fan got sick. Later fan saw Feng, and Feng told her that she could only come secretly, so that no one would know about it. It turns out that Feng Sanniang is a fox spirit.
Chinese PinYin : fēi duǎn liú cháng
malicious gossip
become wiser after being duped. shàng dāng xué guāi