The nest dove
Magpie nest dove is a Chinese idiom. Its pinyin is Qu è L ě ICH á Oji ū, which means that a woman married and lived in her husband's home. Later, it refers to forcibly occupying other people's houses, lands, wives, etc. It is the same as "the nest of magpies and the dove of doves". It comes from "shenluanjiao · bribe strip".
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms: quechao Jiuzhan, quechao Jiuzheng
The origin of Idioms
Li Yu of the Qing Dynasty wrote in the book shenluanjiao bribe bamboo: "there is a lot of enmity. He secretly constructs the machine front for no reason, and forces people out of the way, so he is called a magpie and a nest dove."
Idiom usage
As an object or attribute; used in figurative sentences.
Chinese PinYin : què lěi cháo jiū
The nest dove
Draw a tiger but not a dog. huà hǔ bù chéng fǎn lèi quǎn
make up a deficiency by the surplus. jué cháng xù duǎn
climb trees to catch water from a flint. déng mù qiú yú
a single thread can 't make a cord. dān sī bù xiàn
destory the army and kill the general. fù jūn shā jiāng
give mutual help or assistance. zuǒ tí yòu qiè