be indignant
Indignation, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is f è NF è Nb ù P í ng, which means to feel angry when you are not satisfied. It comes from the biography of Liu in the book of Han Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
According to Liu's rumor in the book of Han Dynasty, "the prince can't see him when he enters, but when he retreats, he will be trapped in a disorderly official. He will die and Sue only because he is wronged. He can't bear to be angry. He will rise to kill him and flee in fear." Xu Song of Tang Dynasty wrote in Jiankang record: "since I was angry, I always chanted Emperor Wu's Yuefu after drinking."
Idiom usage
It can be used as predicate, adverbial and attributive. The prince became his father. All the people were indignant. They asked Duke Huan to rob Marquis Lu in order to repay Cao Mo's humiliation. The 18th chapter of Eastern Zhou Dynasty annals by Feng Menglong in Ming Dynasty
Analysis of Idioms
Antonym: calm and calm
Chinese PinYin : fèn fèn bù píng
be indignant
feel faint and vision blurred. mù xuàn tóu hūn
settle a matter by leaving it unsettled. bù liǎo liǎo zhī
The sun and the moon run through the sky and the rivers run through the land. rì yuè jīng tiān,jiāng hé xíng dì