be condemned out of one 's own mouth
Li Qu CI Qiong, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is l ǐ Q ū C í Qi ó ng, which means there is nothing to say because of Li Kui. From the Analects of Confucius advanced.
The origin of Idioms
Confucius' "the Analects of Confucius · advanced" in pre Qin period: "it's an evil man and a sycophant of Song Dynasty. Zhu Xi's annotation:" Zilu's words are not the original meaning, but his reasoning is poor, and he uses his mouth to defend people's ears. "
Idiom usage
"Like a tyrant who is suddenly trapped in, he puts out his last card at once."
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym] tongue tied, speechless and speechless; [antonym] righteous, upright and eloquent
Chinese PinYin : lǐ qū cí qióng
be condemned out of one 's own mouth
Vow to the mountain and the sea. shì shān méng hǎi
mutual expressions of affection. lái qíng qù yì
No one in the court should be an official. cháo lǐ wú rén mò zuò guān
tragic beyond compare in this human world. cǎn jué rén huán
make the gaudy swallows and orioles pale with envy. yàn dù yīng cán