To shake one's tongue
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is y á Ozu à di à OSH é, which means to shake one's lips. It is used to tease and incite. It's from the west chamber, zhugongdiao.
Idioms and allusions
Jin Dong Jieyuan's Xixiangji zhugongdiao (Volume 2): "if you get Yingying, you'll quit fighting. If you don't get Yingying, you'll get into trouble. If you don't talk, if you don't fight. "
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate, attribute, or object; used in writing.
Chinese PinYin : yáo zuǐ diào shé
To shake one's tongue
capture troublemakers and fight evil-forces. qín jiān tǎo bào
ant holes may cause the collapse of a dyke. dī kuì yǐ kǒng
sweep down irresistibly from a commanding height. gāo wū jiàn líng