The neighbor swears
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is l í NN ǚ L ì R é n, which means that each is his own master. It comes from Qin CE Yi.
Idiom usage
The husband barks at Yao, the neighbor swears at others, and the other firm is his own master.
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms: each is his own master
The origin of Idioms
"The Chu people have two wives The guest said, "the elder scolds you, and the younger rewards you. Why do you take the elder?" He said, "if you live in another person's place, you want him to repay me; if you are my wife, you want him to curse me."
Idiom explanation
Metaphors are different. Swearing refers to "swearing".
Idiom story
During the Warring States period, there was a man in the state of Chu who married two wives. Turn to tease and seduce his wife, did not expect the wife took the initiative to accept him. Someone asked the man who seduced other people's wives whether he liked the first wife or the second wife. He replied that a wife has to protect her husband.
Chinese PinYin : lín nǚ lì rén
The neighbor swears
The running water is not rotten, the cardinal is not mole. liú shuǐ bù fǔ,hù shū bù lóu
Turn the tables on the right and stir up chaos. fǎn zhèng bō luàn
probe into the profound truth. gōu shēn tú yuǎn