provoke a dispute
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Xi é x ì n á C ū, which means to refer to seeking trouble and making trouble. From Lu zhailang.
The origin of Idioms
The third part of Lu Zhai Lang written by Guan Hanqing in Yuan Dynasty: "relying on the evil party and murderer, who dares to bully him, who dares to be obstinate, and who doesn't want his wife."
Idiom usage
As predicate or object; used in spoken English.
Idiom story
There is a main road on the main road, and there is a certain level of entrance. Sages only teach people to form a certain law in the self-care society. If we take one step, we will take another step. The first step is not to take ten steps, and we will not talk about the second step. It's not a bitter person. It's the same level. The first step is one inch short of the second. Confucius said "consistent" with him only when he was gifted, but it was difficult for him to "learn more and know more" first. As for the matter of benevolence, he said, "giving is beyond your reach." Today's people begin to talk about the pulse of learning, then talk about the noumenon, so as to lead the later learning. How is it like a fool talking about a dream before? There is no such teaching method in Confucius.
Chinese PinYin : xié xì ná cū
provoke a dispute
the people are boiling with resentment. mín yuàn fèi téng
point at the chicken and curse the dog. zhǐ jī mà gǒu
resplendent with variegated coloration. wǔ guāng shí sè