look fierce and talk boisterously
A Chinese idiom, Pinyin is j í sh ē NGL ì s è, which means to speak rashly and look stern. It describes the way you look when you are angry with someone. It comes from Hu Zongbo.
The origin of Idioms
In Ma Yu's Ma RI Chao Hu Zongbo of the Ming Dynasty, he said: "although he was angry, he was not fierce."
Idiom usage
In Liang Qichao's the problem of taking back the main line of the railway in Qing Dynasty, he made a vigorous and vigorous speech and threatened to violate the regulations.
Discrimination of words
Angry and angry
Chinese PinYin : jí shēng lì sè
look fierce and talk boisterously
as far apart as heaven and earth. tiān rǎng xuán gé
A tiny difference is a thousand miles away. chā zhī háo lí,shī zhī qiān lǐ
die to preserve one's virtue intact. qǔ yì chéng rén
Divide the grass and give the earth. fēn máo cì tǔ
take immediate measures when finding symptoms. jiàn jī ér zuò
high officials and noble lords. dá guān guì rén