right to the point
Straight to court, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is zh í R ù g ō NGT á ng, which means that the words and deeds are straightforward, not roundabout. It's from Lao She's Camel Xiangzi.
The origin of Idioms
Lao She's "Camel Xiangzi" 9: "however, let's just go straight to court, or not." "Four generations in the same hall" Seven: "go to these families! Don't go straight to court and ask for help, okay? Let's just ask what we can do! "
Idiom usage
Used as an attributive or adverbial
Chinese PinYin : zhí rù gōng táng
right to the point
an outwardly kind but inwardly cruel person. xiào miàn hǔ
A thousand hammers beat the Gong, one hammers set the tone. qiān chuí dǎ luó,yī chuí dìng yīn
words benefit universal benevolence. rén yán lì pǔ
lessons drawn from others ' mistakes. hòu chē zhī jiè