Pick a scorpion and tease a bee
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is t ī Xi ē Li á of ē ng, which means to make trouble. It comes from the orphan of Zhao.
The origin of Idioms
The second fold of the orphan Zhao by Ji Junxiang of the Yuan Dynasty: "you are an old farmer who was dismissed from his post and returned to the fields. You dare to defy scorpions and molest bees." In Yuan Dynasty, the first fold of "Xiao weichi" written by Wu Mingshi: "it's often a fight for dragons and tigers, and a fight against scorpions and bees."
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms lead wolves into the house
The antonym "keep your peace"
Idiom usage
As predicate, object, attribute; used in figurative sentences
Examples
The second part of Ming Dynasty's Wu Mingshi's four horses to Tang Dynasty: "when you are going to fight, you should be against the Tang family."
Chinese PinYin : tī xiē liáo fēng
Pick a scorpion and tease a bee
the heart breaks thinking of one 's love. róu cháng cùn duàn
the spring snow -- a highbrow song. yáng chūn bái xuě
coarse clothes and simple fare. bì yī shū shí