alienate one person from another
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is ti à ob à L í Ji à n. originally it refers to groundless words, but now it mostly refers to spreading rumors, slandering and slandering others behind their backs. It's from officialdom.
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym] to stir up trouble, to poke right and wrong, to tell right and wrong
The origin of Idioms
The 39th chapter of Li Baojia's Officialdom: This surname is Hu Mingfu, who loves to stir up dissension.
Idiom usage
Combined; as predicate; emotional color: derogatory. examples in our life, we often meet some villains, from which to sow dissension, resulting in good friends, lovers, husband and wife, relatives become enemies of many examples! Don't be careless! Be careful to guard against "rumors" created by villains!! So as not to be deceived into believing it! Otherwise, it will cause unnecessary "major injury". Remind everyone: This is a plan of estrangement! Really don't believe it! Chapter 37 of song of youth by Yang Mo: the reactionaries like us to fight against each other and sow discord between us. Chapter 6 of Jin Yong's biography of the arched Hero: in the future, the two families should be as close as one family, and they should not be provoked by others. in Mao Dun's frost leaves are red like February flowers, some snobbish people are despicable and used to stir up trouble and sow discord. Biography of the Three Kingdoms, Wu Zhi and Zhuge Jin: alienating human flesh and blood.
Chinese PinYin : tiǎo bō lí jiàn
alienate one person from another
Your crown and shoes light head and feet. guì guān lǚ qīng tóu zú
the family is in straitened circumstances. jiā dào zhōng luò
Help each other with sincerity. hé zhōng gòng jì
shelter evil people and countenance evil practices. cáng gòu nà wū