To raise an eagle
Yang Ying Yang Qu, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y ǎ ngy ī ngz ǒ UQ ù, which means that ambitious people are not easy to control, and when they are satisfied, they are no longer used by their masters. It comes from the biography of Lu Bu in the later Han Dynasty.
Idiom explanation
It means that an ambitious person is not easy to control, and when he is satisfied, he is no longer used by his master.
The origin of Idioms
In the biography of Lu Bu in the book of the later Han Dynasty by Fan Ye of the Southern Dynasty, it is said that "for example, raising eagles, hunger is for use, and satiety is for flight.
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: Wolf ambition.
Idiom usage
As an object or attribute; used in figurative sentences.
Examples
Hu Mengyu of Song Dynasty wrote in the second letter of Jiading Renwu on June 5: "at the beginning of its attachment, the state theory was in an uproar, and there were doubts about raising eagles, or fears about the legacy of raising tigers.
Chinese PinYin : yǎng yīng zǒu qù
To raise an eagle
remove the evil and follow the good. gǎi è xiàng shàn