Smooth the sleeves
It is a Chinese idiom.
Pinyin: Lu ō Xi ù Xu ā nqu á n,
Explanation: smooth, pull up. Roll up your sleeves. Pull up your sleeves and stick out your fists. Idioms are used to describe the appearance of being angry and ready to use force.
idiom
Smooth the sleeves
Pinyin
luōxiùxuānquán
Citation explanation
Pull up: pull up. 揎: roll up your sleeves. Pull up your sleeves and stick out your fists. It's used to describe being angry and ready to use force. The fourth fold of Jin Renjie's chasing Hanxin in the Yuan Dynasty: "the front and rear soldiers are closely united, and the left and right gun and knife stables are surrounded. "Hold your sleeves and fists, hold the top of your helmet, break your steps, lift your clothes and pull your sword." Yuan Wumingshi's the third fold of "breaking the peach blossom on sakren's night": "every one of them is arrogant, and they are not good at it. Every time he yells and shakes his sleeve, my legs are sour and soft. I can't help but be frightened." The first fold of Ming Wumingshi's "Suo Bai ape": you can see him smoothing his sleeves and fists, and his eyes and eyebrows.
words whose meaning is similar
The second fold of Liu Xingshou by Yang Na of Yuan Dynasty: bullying the good and suppressing the good are not clear, while bullying the sleeve is ferocious.
Related words
Bare arms, bare sleeves, bare sleeves
English translation
pullupthesleevesandraisethefists
Idiom information
Idiom explanation: smooth: pull up. 揎: roll up your sleeves. Pull up your sleeves and stick out your fists. It's used to describe being angry and ready to use force. degree of common use: rare emotional color: commendatory words grammatical usage: predicate, attribute, adverbial; refers to ready to use force idiom structure: combined generation time: Ancient
Chinese PinYin : luō xiù xuān quán
Smooth the sleeves
The wave behind hastens the wave ahead. hòu làng cuī qián làng
to reject something as if it were worthless. qì rú bì xǐ
Sleeping snow sleeping cream. wò xuě mián shuāng