Stick in the open fire
Holding a stick in open fire, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is m í nghu à ch í zh à ng, which means to describe public robbery or unscrupulous doing bad things. come from
Idiom explanation
[explanation]: it is used to describe public robbery or unscrupulous doing evil
The origin of Idioms
According to the book of Yuan Dynasty, the punishment department, no stabbing for those who have no money from thieves: "sun Bonu, Meng ganer, Zhu Peier and Li Fobao, the four thieves, robbed the ten Liangxian families with their sticks.
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms: fire to arms, fire to stick.
Idiom usage
It refers to doing bad things. I'm a future leather leopard. I'm good at six Taos and three strategies. I'm a robber with Zhan Xiong. In Ming Dynasty, Wu Mingshi wrote lintongdoubao.
Chinese PinYin : míng huǒ chí zhàng
Stick in the open fire
behave as if nothing had happened. xíng ruò wú shì
plan to station troops permanently. zhù shì fǎn gēng
Catch the skirt and expose the elbow. zhuō jīn lù zhǒu
Do not trample on cattle and sheep. niú yáng wù jiàn