Hairless beetle
Hairless insects, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is w ú m á OD à ch ó ng, which means tiger without hair. It refers to the evil things that light can't easily see through. From Zhuangzhou dream.
The origin of Idioms
The first fold of Zhuangzhou dream written by jiujingxian in the Yuan Dynasty: "speaking of the Taoist school, it is not the same as you. What you love is romantic, what I love is lazy. Four things, hairless insects, and then stop meeting with wine, sex and wealth. "
Idiom usage
As an object or attribute; used in figurative sentences
Chinese PinYin : wú máo dà chóng
Hairless beetle
take pity on the poor and the old. lián pín xī lǎo
recover one 's original simplicity ; return to one 's original nature. fǎn pǔ guī zhēn
Eight difficulties and three disasters. bā nàn sān zāi