Flattery and cowardice
Flattery and cowardice, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is zh é y ú L ì nuॸ, meaning that flatterers know how to fear, cowards know how to stand on their own. It comes from Chen liaoweng's history.
The origin of Idioms
Yue Ke of the Song Dynasty wrote "the first and last chapters of Chen Liao Weng in the history of Chen Liao": the former book "Zun yao ji Biao", which covers the whole story of each other. He flatters others and is cowardly. He is not tired of writing many books. "
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attributive; used in writing. Only a person like him can be flattering and cowardly. The country needs such a person. We must keep him.
Chinese PinYin : zhé yú lì nuò
Flattery and cowardice
clasp the moon in the Ninth Heaven. jiǔ tiān lǎn yuè
a snipe and a clam locked in combat. yù bàng xiāng zhēng