stir up trouble with very little cause
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is Ji à NSH à sh à NGF à ng, which means to make trouble when something happens. It comes from the biography of Zhao Guanghan.
The origin of Idioms
Ban Gu's biography of Zhao Guanghan in the history of the Han Dynasty: "you can't avoid what you see."
Idiom usage
It's used as predicate and object. Example: he bange's "night stories with records of Ji Wei Zhi Yi" in Qing Dynasty: "the first youth wedding, every shadow, see things make wind."
Chinese PinYin : jiàn shì shēng fēng
stir up trouble with very little cause
Less courtesy, more satisfaction. lǐ qīng rén yì zhòng
promote what is beneficial and abolish what is harmful. xīng lì chú bì