Make plans
Plan, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is p ū m ó UD ì NGJ ì, which means to plan. It comes from Jin Ping Mei CI Hua.
The origin of Idioms
The 20th chapter of Jin Ping Mei CI Hua written by Lan Ling Xiaosheng of Ming Dynasty: "I guess the old godmother and the adulteress have made up their minds. They ask them to play tricks somehow. If they don't want to accompany them, they have to go back to the furnace to settle the accounts. I don't know when they will be bothered."
Idiom usage
Shi Yukun's three heroes and five righteousness first chapter: after returning to the palace that day, he secretly made plans with Guo Huai, the general manager of the capital hall, to harm Li Fei. Xizhousheng's xizhousheng's xizhousheng's xizhousheng's xizhousheng's xizhousheng's xizhousheng's xizhousheng's xizhousheng's xizhousheng's xizhousheng's xizhousheng's xizhousheng's xizhousheng's xizhousheng's xizhousheng's xizhousheng's xizhousheng's xizhousheng's Xizhou
Chinese PinYin : pù móu dìng jì
Make plans
know and observe all but stay obscure. zhī bái shǒu hēi