into ten thousand pieces
It's a Chinese idiom, and its pinyin is Su ì sh ī w à NDU à n. It's extremely strict to punish those who commit the most serious crimes. From the outlaws of the marsh.
The origin of Idioms
The fifty second chapter of Shi Naian's outlaws of the marsh in the Ming Dynasty: "Lin Chong yelled:" you are a bandit, sooner or later I will kill you in the capital, and I will kill your deceiving Minister Gao Qiu to pieces.
Idiom usage
I wish I could tear you to pieces, you devil! The 100th chapter of the chronicles of the Eastern Zhou Dynasty written by Feng Menglong of Ming Dynasty: "the king forgets his past righteousness, but the young master is in a hurry to go to the same room. If he is lucky enough to be Qin Quanzhao, the king's prestige is far and near, and his righteous voice is better than that of the whole world. Although my concubine is broken, why do you hate it?"
Chinese PinYin : suì shī wàn duàn
into ten thousand pieces
too many government officials. shí yáng jiǔ mù
When water is wet, fire is dry. shuǐ liú shī,huǒ jiù zào