ransack boxes and chests
Pouring boxes is a word, Pinyin Q ī ngku ā NGD à oqi è, to dump all the things in big and small boxes. It's like taking it all out or looking it over.
Idioms and allusions
Source: Xianyuan, a new account of the world, written by Liu Yiqing in the Southern Dynasty Song Dynasty: "when the Wangs see erxie, they pour out their baskets; when they see you coming, they are calm; you can go back without trouble." Example: when Xu finished, he felt relieved. Idiom story: Wang Dao, the Prime Minister of the Eastern Jin Dynasty, introduced his nephew Wang Xizhi to Xi Jian's daughter as a matchmaker. Xi Jian went to Wang Xizhi's house in person, and the one pointed to the East bed was the one who was honest. Xie an and Xie Wan often went to Wang Xizhi's house to play, and the Wang family entertained them, but they were indifferent to their two wives and uncles
Discrimination of words
Usage: as predicate, adverbial; metaphor all inverted
Chinese PinYin : qīng kuāng dào qiè
ransack boxes and chests
wear one 's heart on one 's sleeve. xīn zhí zuǐ kuài
both intelligent and courageous. zhì yǒng jiān quán