alternate intimidation and bribery
Coercion and inducement, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is w ē IP ò L ì y ò u, which means to use both hard and soft means to try to make people yield. From a talk with Xinhua daily about the new international situation.
The origin of Idioms
"The Social Democratic Party of the second international, under the coercion and inducement of Chamberlain and daladi, is undergoing differentiation," Mao Zedong said in his talk to Xinhua Daily on the new international situation
Idiom usage
Combined; predicate; derogatory.
Examples
Wang Zhuo of the Song Dynasty wrote a poem in Yitang anthology Volume 3: Li Zhonggao's shijuntang: "lure and threaten to take away, Zhonggao vows to die."
Chinese PinYin : wēi pò lì yòu
alternate intimidation and bribery
To raise the spirits and clear the turbid. jī yáng qīng zhuó
the path winds along mountain ridges. fēng huí lù zhuǎn