fratricidal fighting
Fratricidal, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is g ǔ R ò uxi ā NGC á n, which means relatives kill each other. It's a metaphor for killing each other. It comes from a new account of the world - political affairs.
Entry
fratricidal fighting
Pinyin
gǔròuxiāngcán
Citation explanation
Relatives kill each other. It's a metaphor for killing each other. According to Zhongli Yizhuan in the book of the later Han Dynasty, "all officials have no intention of dating each other, and officials have no ambition of being Yong and Yong. As for fratricidal, the poison is deep, and they feel rebellious and harmonious, leading to natural disasters." "It's time for Sima's family to be fratricidal, and the whole world will be in turmoil, and the nation will be prosperous and resume its business." In the Southern Dynasty, Song Dynasty and Liu Yiqing's new account of the world, political affairs: "Zhong Gong said:" if you steal and kill a rich man, how can you be cruel? " Biography of the sons of Emperor Wen of the Song Dynasty in Southern History: why do you kill innocent people in vain when your family is fratricidal. Chapter 5 of the chronicles of the states of the Eastern Zhou Dynasty by Feng Menglong of Ming Dynasty. In Chapter 43 of the chronicles of the Eastern Zhou Dynasty written by Feng Menglong of Ming Dynasty, "it was the act of directing Zhou Zhen and ye Luo to attack. Then he killed the rebellious and killed the flesh and blood. Although Wei Chenggong was weak, Wu Zi was not innocent."
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym] killing each other, frying the Osmunda japonica, fighting with brothers, boiling the Osmunda japonica
Idiom usage
Subject predicate type; predicate; metaphor of killing each other.
Chinese PinYin : gǔ ròu xiāng cán
fratricidal fighting
people starved to death are everywhere. è piǎo zài dào
The tree wants to be quiet, but the wind doesn't stop. shù yù jìng ér fēng bù tíng