bloodshed
Blood dripping, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Xi ā nxu è L í NL í, meaning to describe the continuous flow of blood. From chasing Hanxin.
Idiom explanation
Dripping: keep dripping down.
The origin of Idioms
The fourth fold of Yuan Jin Renjie's chasing Hanxin: "ape's back bows, drunk eyes are hazy, waist and neck are slanting, ah! He's bloody already
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attributive; used in bloody scenes. Chapter 71 of the complete biography of Shuoyue written by Qian Cai in Qing Dynasty: "there are also those who break their heads. They are dripping with blood, so they are not hurt." In Chapter 54 of the chronicles of the Eastern Zhou Dynasty by Feng Menglong of the Ming Dynasty, "xunlin's father and Han Jue boarded the chariot from the rear camp, led the defeated soldiers, took the right side of the road, walked along the river, abandoned the chariots and horses, and caught up in the valley first. He shot an arrow in his forehead and pulled his robe with blood." At the beginning of the entanglement, her daughter was in all kinds of pain, caressing her feet and wailing, even losing her skin and flesh. The twelfth chapter of Jing Hua Yuan by Li Ruzhen in Qing Dynasty
Chinese PinYin : xiān xuè lín lí
bloodshed
punish one as a warning to a hundred. chéng yī jǐng bǎi
What you say comes with what you say. yán chū huò suí
be well-informed and suspend judgment on things in doubt. duō wén quē yí