Make trouble
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is j í ch ǔǔ D ǎ ox ī n, meaning surprised and upset mood. It comes from Qian Qianyi's essay on responding to Wang Yuyi.
Idiom explanation
To describe a feeling of surprise and uneasiness.
The origin of Idioms
Qian Qianyi of the Qing Dynasty wrote a treatise on Wang Yuyi: "seeing Xu Juyuan's and Chen Boji's books, he talked about the characters of his servants in his later years. Zhuan was good at swearing and preaching words to persuade them to abstain. How could he point out that he was speechless? Those who were eager to stir up trouble for days."
Idiom usage
As an object or attribute; used in figurative sentences
Chinese PinYin : jí chǔ dǎo xīn
Make trouble
A bundle of cattail is preserved. shù pú wéi pú
Success, failure, rise and fall. chéng bài xīng fèi
use the past to attack the present. yǐ gǔ fēi jīn
get without any labor without doing any work. bù láo ér huò
a vast territory with a large population. guǎng tǔ zhòng mín