Bird burns fish
Bird burns fish, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Ni à of é NY ú L à n, which means to die because of civil strife. From Yi Lu.
Idiom usage
As an object or attribute; used in figurative sentences
Examples
At the beginning, a fox pretends to be a rooster, and it is said that there is no enemy in the rooster; at the end, a bird burns a fish, and it is nothing but a ruin.
The origin of Idioms
Yi Lu: "birds burn their nests, and travelers laugh first and then wail." "Gongyang Zhuan, the 19th year of Duke Fu:" what did he say about the death of Liang? I'll die. How can it die? It's also a case of fish rotting to death. "
Idiom explanation
The fall of a person due to civil strife.
Chinese PinYin : niǎo fén yú làn
Bird burns fish
Forefathers slip, posterity slip. qián rén shī jiǎo,hòu rén bǎ huá