insinuation
Insinuation, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is h á NSH ā sh è y ǐ ng, which means that a kind of animal is said to spray people's shadow with sand in the water, making people sick. It refers to attacking or framing people secretly. It can also be used to satirize others. It comes from Volume 12 of Soushenji.
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym] bloody, abusive, slandering [antonym] aboveboard, straightforward
The origin of Idioms
Volume 12 of Soushenji written by Gan Bao of Jin Dynasty: "its name is Jue. One is short fox, which can shoot people with sand. The one in it has a headache and fever, and the one in the play will die."
Idiom usage
It has a derogatory meaning. Example: in Dai Ku re Xing written by Bao Zhao of the Southern Song Dynasty: "the shadow of the sand jet, blowing Gu Tong Xing Hui." Yesterday, Zhang put up a notice in the column of "Qingguang", which was insinuating and slandering wantonly. Lu Xun's postscript of pseudo freedom Book quoted Li Liewen as a notice. "Insinuation and insinuation are harmful to people. "The third and fourth stories of caihaoji by Tu Long of Ming Dynasty:" what's in the shadow of the sand? When you're out of your mind, you'll be wandering. 」
Chinese PinYin : hán shā shè yǐng
insinuation
can hardly decline sb . 's kind offer. qíng bù kě què
wind that carries sand and drives stones. fēi shē zǒu lì
debauch people and turn them into gangsters. huì yín huì dào
wrinkled skin and white hair -- advanced in age. jī pí hè fà
attend to the trivialities and neglect the fundamentals. bèi běn qū mò
having maps on the left and history books on the right -- a home library. zuǒ tú yòu shǐ