domestic trouble and foreign invasion
The Chinese idiom, n è iy à UW à Ihu à n in pinyin, refers to domestic disturbances and external disasters; it also refers to internal disputes and external pressure. From Guan Zi Jie.
The origin of Idioms
Guan Zhong's Guanzi · Jie: "if you give up outside but don't give up, you must have internal worries and external troubles."
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: internal and external difficulties, the country's difficult pace
Idiom usage
It is characterized by the combination, the subject, the object and the attribute, the internal instability and the invasion of foreign enemies. In the past hundred years, our nation has gone through countless changes.
Idiom story
In the spring and Autumn period, the state of Lu was in chaos, and the power was controlled by the three families of Jisun, mengsun and shusun. Duke Ding of Lu became a puppet. He heard that Confucius gave lectures, advocated "monarch and Minister" and "benevolent government", summoned Confucius to analyze the internal and external troubles of the state of Lu. Confucius suggested that he should contact the state of Qi externally and revive the monarchy internally, and formulated a series of measures.
Chinese PinYin : nèi yōu wài huàn
domestic trouble and foreign invasion
not see the wood for the tress. zhī qí yī,bù zhī qí èr
The car is in a flat position. lián chē píng dǒu
People die for money, birds die for food. rén wèi cái sǐ,niǎo wèi shí wáng
come back with a flick of one 's sleeve. fú xiù ér guī