imminent trouble
Trouble in the elbow and armpit, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is zh ǒ uy è zh ī Hu à n, which means the trouble that comes from the side. It comes from the biography of the Three Kingdoms, Shu annals and FA Zheng Zhuan.
Notes on Idioms
Elbows, armpits, elbows and armpits refer to places very close to each other.
The origin of Idioms
In the history of the Three Kingdoms, Shu annals and FA Zheng Zhuan, "if you are near, you are afraid that Sun Fu's life will change under your elbow and armpit."
Idiom usage
As the subject and object, it describes the disaster that comes from the side.
Examples
The fifth chapter of Chen Chen's Water Margin later biography in Qing Dynasty: "this is the trouble of elbow and armpit, if we don't get rid of him first."
Wang Shunan's "Wuhan war discipline" said: "it's a matter of wavering morale and suffering from elbow and armpit."
Li Yu of the Qing Dynasty said in his book "jade scratching the head and talking about martial arts" that "the trouble in the elbow and armpit of the lower officials is also the worry of the country.
Zhao Yi's notes on the twenty two histories in Qing Dynasty, Volume 20: "those who are handsome not only worry about their changes, but also want to tie their hearts to help them."
He is also my enemy; and he is my elbow and armpit trouble, his existence is a deep threat to the safety of my life every minute.
Chinese PinYin : zhǒu yè zhī huàn
imminent trouble
high walls and deep moat -- a defended city. gāo chéng shēn chí