The devil is born of man
The Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y ā oy ó ur é nx ī ng, which means that evil and misfortune are caused by people's behavior against the common way.
Idiom explanation
It refers to the evil and disaster caused by people's behavior against the common way.
The origin of Idioms
Zuo Qiuming's the fourteenth year of zhuanggong in Zuozhuan in the pre Qin period: at the beginning of the Qing Dynasty, the inner snake and the outer snake fought in the Zhengnan gate, and the inner snake died. In six years, Li Gong entered. Hearing this, Gong asked Yu Shenyu, "is there still a demon?" He said to him, "what a man should not do is to take it with his arrogance. If a man has no quarrel, the devil will not make himself. If people abandon them, they will become demons, so there are demons.
Word usage
Subject predicate; predicate, object, clause; derogatory
[example] according to the book of ancient mirrors written by Wang Du in Sui Dynasty, "it's appropriate to have a prostitute temple."
[example] only when you are close to your ear and don't see its shape can you know that it is a ghost. How often. Notes of Yuewei thatched cottage by Ji Yun in Qing Dynasty (Volume 6)
Chinese PinYin : yāo yóu rén xīng
The devil is born of man
full of difficult and unpronounceable words. jié qū dà yá
barter the trunk for the branches. bèi běn jiù mò
ask about taboos and bans upon arrival in a foreign country. rù jìng wèn jìn
establish one 's reputation as an authority. chéng míng chéng jiā
rob the rich and assist the poor. jié fù jì pín