Stir up trouble
In Chinese, Pinyin is p á ngy á oy ī NSH ā n, which means to incite people everywhere. It comes from Pan Yinchuan's contribution to the river course.
The origin of Idioms
Zhang Juzheng of the Ming Dynasty wrote in his book a reply to pan Yinchuan's comments on the achievements of the river course: "when we recall the beginning of the incident, the speakers swarmed up, and those who were envious of the success or failure stirred up the flames. It's just a conspiracy."
Analysis of Idioms
To stir up the flames
Idiom usage
As a predicate, attribute, adverbial; used in dealing with affairs
Chinese PinYin : páng yáo yīn shān
Stir up trouble
said of lao lai zi of the spring and autumn period. bān yī xì cǎi
choose and follow what is good. zé shàn ér xíng
hide and cover from place to place. dōng yǎn xī zhē