angry
Wumingyehuo, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is w ú m í ngy è Hu ǒ, which means anger. From man Tingfang, a gift to Mr. Zhao Lei.
The origin of Idioms
Jin · Ma Yu's poem "man Tingfang, a gift to Mr. Zhao Lei" says: stop your unprofessional career, let alone think about it. Fame and wealth are related.
Idiom usage
Used as an object or attribute; used in writing. The third chapter of Ming Shi Naian's outlaws of the Marsh: "Zheng TU was furious, and two lines of anger rushed from the bottom of his feet to the top door. The flame of wumingye can't hold it. He grabs a sharp knife from the meat case and jumps down. " Shi Naian's Water Margin chapter 31: after listening to Wu Song's story, he broke through the blue sky with a fire of unprofessional career. Ming Shi Naian's outlaws of the marsh Chapter 47: after listening to Li Ying, he raised his unprofessional career to three thousand feet and could not accept it. He cried out: "Chuang Ke, prepare my horse quickly!" The 15th volume of Feng Menglong's ancient and modern novels in Ming Dynasty: "two lines of anger run from the sole of the foot to the top door. There is no open fire in my heart. I can't restrain it."
Chinese PinYin : wú míng yè huǒ
angry
harm others to benefit oneself. sǔn rén yì jǐ
difficult miscellaneous diseases. yí nán zá zhèng
The way is high and the virtue is heavy. dào gāo dé zhòng
discuss the state affairs together. gòng shāng guó shì