be a bully under the protection of a powerful person
The Chinese idiom, G ǒ UB à NgR é NSH ì in pinyin, means that bad people bully people by some force. It comes from a piece of stone, a visit to the tomb by Jiang Shiquan in the Qing Dynasty.
Idiom usage
It refers to bullying others
Analysis of Idioms
A close synonym: a dog upholds power
The origin of Idioms
In a piece of stone, a visit to the tomb by Jiang Shiquan in Qing Dynasty: "I put you in charge of heaven Master Zhang. Your old man is not Daoji. I'm afraid of him."
Idiom explanation
It means that the bad guys bully people by some force. It's the same as "dog upholding power".
Chinese PinYin : gǒu bàng rén shì
be a bully under the protection of a powerful person
take good care of one 's parents. wèn ān shì qǐn
patiently attend to a grave problem. jí mài huǎn jiù
A generation of great ministers. yī dài zōng chén