seize on some pretext or other to distort
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Ji è t í f ā Hu ī, which means to write an article on a subject to express one's real opinions or opinions, or to publish a discussion unrelated to it. It also refers to doing other things under the pretext of something. From the history of pain.
The origin of Idioms
The seventh chapter of the history of pain by Wu Jianren in Qing Dynasty: "I was touched and scolded him. That's what you scholars mean by "borrowing from a topic to bring it into full play."
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms: making a mountain out of a molehill, pointing at thorns and cursing locusts, going from here to there, taking the opportunity to make trouble. antonym: make a mountain out of a molehill.
Idiom usage
It refers to making trouble intentionally.
Chinese PinYin : jiè tí fā huī
seize on some pretext or other to distort
an ant trying to shake a tree-ridiculously overrating oneself. hàn shù bí fú
be delivered from oppression. chóng dǔ tiān rì
More help from the right, less help from the wrong. dé dào duō zhù,shī dào guǎ zhù
Bridge is bridge, road is road. qiáo shì qiáo,lù shì lù
each sticks to his own viewpoint. gè zhí jǐ jiàn
when the clouds part , one sees the sun. yún kāi wù sàn