The weasel
The Chinese idiom, J ì f ē ngsh è sh ǔ, refers to the wasp in the valley temple and the mouse in the earth temple. It's a metaphor for those who rely on power to do evil. From Han Shi waizhuan.
Idiom explanation
Idiom: jifengshemo Pinyin: J ì f ē ngsh è sh ǔ interpretation: wasps in the valley temple, mice in the earth temple. It's a metaphor for those who rely on power to do evil.
The origin of Idioms
"Han Shi waizhuan" Volume 8: "Ji bee does not attack and she rat does not smoke, not by Ji bee and she rat God, its trust is good."
Discrimination of words
Synonyms: citron commune degree of common use: remote emotional color: commendatory words grammatical usage: as subject and object; idiom structure: combined generation time: Ancient
Chinese PinYin : jì fēng shè shǔ
The weasel
manifest plainness, embrace simplicity. xiàn sù bào pǔ
coarse meals of a farming family. mài fàn dòu gēng
Buddha's heart and snake's mouth. fó xīn shé kǒu