an evil lot
Fox group dog Gang, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is h ú Q ú ng ǒ UD ǎ ng, which means a metaphor for colluding villains. From Qi Ying bu.
The origin of Idioms
The fourth fold of Qi Ying Bu written by Wu Mingshi in Yuan Dynasty: "if we didn't help Liu Chuxiang and chase the mob, how could Wu Liang appear to be the king of us?"
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: a dog of a feather, a fox friend, a collusion
Idiom usage
It is used as subject, object and attribute; it is used as a metaphor for a person who is in collusion. Chapter 90 of Cao Xueqin's a dream of Red Mansions in Qing Dynasty: who are the people my brother has met outside in recent years! I don't even have a serious one. At first, they're all gangsters. Chapter 12 of the romance of the Three Kingdoms by Luo Guanzhong in the Ming Dynasty: Tao gongzu sent Cao mengde to Xuzhou three times to fight Lv Bu: Although there were many bandits, they were all gangsters and there was no team. Chapter 20 of the history of the imperial palace of the Sui Dynasty: when a group of Fox and dog gangs saw that a great event had been accomplished, they went further. Kwai an evil lot, the seventeenth time: "Cao Cao also invited some friends of his gang."
Chinese PinYin : hú qún gǒu dǎng
an evil lot
Keep green hills, don't worry about firewood. liú dé qīng shān zài,bù chóu méi chái shāo
miraculous skill in curing a disease. huí chūn miào shǒu
Come in high spirits and come back in low spirits. chéng xìng ér lái,bài xìng ér guī