Violence for violence
The Chinese idiom, Pinyin y à B à oy à B à o, uses the brute force to replace the brute force, which means that when the ruler changes, the tyrannical rule remains unchanged.
pronunciation
Foreign language: toreplacevision with vitality pinyin: y ǐ B à oy ì B à o phonetic notation: ㄧ ㄅ ㄠ a
explain
To replace the tyrannical forces with the tyrannical forces means that the tyrannical rule has not changed after the change of the rulers.
Classics
Biographies of Boyi in historical records: I ascend Mount Bixi, pick up its Wei, and exchange violence with violence. I don't know what it is. When the officials thought about going to a fox and getting one, they changed violence to violence, and they didn't dare to respond to it. ——Strange stories from a lonely studio by Pu Songling in Qing Dynasty
Discrimination
Synonym: violence is easy to disorder; usage: formal; predicate, attribute; derogatory.
Idiom story
At the end of the Shang Dynasty, Boyi and Shuqi were the sons of the king of Guzhu. After Guzhu's death, they refused to be king and went to King Wen of Zhou. After the death of King Wen, King Wu sent troops to fight against the tyrant King Zhou of Shang Dynasty. On the day of departure, Boyi and uncle Qi took King Wu's horse and advised him not to take military action. They thought that "it's not right to trade violence for violence."
Chinese PinYin : yǐ bào yì bào
Violence for violence
Summer insects can't talk ice. xià chóng bù kě yǐ yǔ bīng
The bell is ringing at the end of the day. dǐng shí zhōng míng
take more time to consider the matter. shì kuān zé yuán