encourage monsters to stalk abroad , making trouble , causing disorder
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is x ī ngy ā Ozu ò Ni è, which means that monsters make trouble everywhere. It is a metaphor for villains who make trouble and do evil. It comes from the new story of jiandeng, a tale of yemiao in Yongzhou.
The origin of Idioms
Qu you, Ming Dynasty, wrote in a new story about cutting lanterns: Notes on the wild temple in Yongzhou: "this thing has been alive for a long time, and it is incomparable for it to cause evils."
Chinese PinYin : xīng yāo zuò niè
encourage monsters to stalk abroad , making trouble , causing disorder
bitter as if it were malt sugar. gān zhī rú jì
A cup of wine is a solution to resentment. bēi jiǔ jiě yuàn