Wearing hair with teeth
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is h á NCH à D à if à, which means there are teeth in the mouth and long hair on the head, refers to human beings. It comes from the biography of Han Zixi.
The origin of Idioms
According to the biography of Han Zixi in the book of Wei, "it's a pity that he abandoned the empress dowager, separated from the second palace, tortured Hu Ding, framed the king for poison, and wore his hair with his teeth."
Idiom usage
It refers to human beings. It's better to wear your hair with your teeth. Life and death are bathed under the cover of Tao. There is no one who can make noise. Yi Si by Wang Fuzhi in Qing Dynasty
Chinese PinYin : hán chǐ dài fā
Wearing hair with teeth
search minutely for sb . 's smallest fault. sōu gēn tī chǐ
use one's personality to influence others. jī bó tíng jiāo
talk cheerfully and humorously. tán lùn fēng shēng
revert to one 's former state. jiù niàn fù máng
The order of running through the fish. guàn yú zhī xù
with half of one 's body already in the grave. bàn jié rù tǔ