Barking at the sound
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Su í sh ēē NGF è iy ǐ ng, which means that once instigated by others, they will attack people regardless of right or wrong. It comes from the theory of potential husband, Xiannan.
The origin of Idioms
Wang Fu of the Han Dynasty wrote "on the hidden man, Xiannan:" as the saying goes, "a dog barks, and a hundred dogs bark."
Idiom usage
It refers to the following. He was so calm and shameless that he was reckless. In Qing Dynasty, Wang Tao wrote the book of fengtaishou in Guangzhou. "It's naive to confuse the internet mob and fans" by contemporary writer Yin Qian: "there is a difference between the internet mob and the internet violence. When the internet mob ends the abusive words or verbal attacks, and uses destructive and destructive means of violence to attack others, then this nature has changed a lot. The former can attack the attacked The latter is both. The victim will not only suffer mental damage, but also suffer direct or indirect losses after being attacked. "
Chinese PinYin : suí shēng fèi yǐng
Barking at the sound
great plan and noble ambition. hóng tú dà zhì
be free from things of the world. chāo rán wù wài
blow the fire by making use of the wind. yǐn fēng chuī huǒ
abuse outrageously and without any restraint. sì yán lì rǔ
The crown of a bullet is tied to the ribbon. tán guān jié shòu