plot a rebellion
The Chinese idiom, Pinyin is m ó ut ú B ù Gu ǐ, which means to plan something out of the norm. It comes from the biography of emperor Zhang and eight kings in the book of the later Han Dynasty.
Idiom usage
As predicate, attribute, object; usurpation
Examples
An imperial edict was issued one after another, saying that Wei was good at killing the second father and son, and wanted to kill the courtiers. He had a bad plan and committed a great crime.
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: treason, treason
The origin of Idioms
According to the biography of the eight kings of emperor Zhang in the book of the later Han Dynasty, "Wang Sheng, the lactating mother of emperor an, and the brothers and wings of Deng Xu, such as Jiang Jing, the constant servant of the central government, cloud and Zhao Wang, the senior official of the central government, conspire against each other, peeping at the artifact and cherishing great rebelliousness."
Idiom explanation
Plot: plot in secret; misconduct: deviating from the norm and not abiding by the law. Plan things that go beyond the rules and regulations.
Chinese PinYin : móu tú bù guǐ
plot a rebellion
a poor widow does not care for the weaving -- a patriot who cares not for his own enterprise. lí bù xù wěi
would not explain unless one is desperately anxious to learn. bù fèn bù qǐ