Wine in the mouth
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Ji ǔ R ù sh é ch ū, meaning that people like to nag after drinking. It comes from Han Ying's Han Shi waizhuan in the Western Han Dynasty.
Idiom usage
Guan Zhong said to him: when a minister hears that wine comes in and out of his mouth, he loses his words.
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: drink and tell the truth
The origin of Idioms
The tenth volume of Han Ying's Han Shi waizhuan in the Western Han Dynasty: "when a minister hears the wine coming in, his tongue comes out. When his tongue comes out, he abandons his body. Would you rather give up the wine?"
Idiom explanation
After drinking, people like to nag.
Chinese PinYin : jiǔ rù shé chū
Wine in the mouth
what the heart wishes one 's hands accomplish. dé xīn yìng shǒu
which it would be awkward to disclose. nán yán zhī yǐn