show one's teeth
Grinning, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Z ī y á Li ě Zu ǐ, which describes a ferocious or painful appearance. From Wu Chengen's journey to the West.
The origin of Idioms
The fifth chapter of journey to the west by Wu Chengen of Ming Dynasty: "that is to say," it's not delicious! It's not delicious! "
Analysis of Idioms
The lantern riddles: the roast sheep heads; the stone lions in front of the temple; lantern riddles: judges in Town God's Temple.
Idiom usage
The dog on both sides of the river is red eyed when eating dead bodies, and it's easy to see a stranger. Junqing's "autumn color Fu: memories of hometown" and Leo Tolstoy's "diving": climbing to the top of the mast, it hooks the rope with its hind legs, hangs its hat on one end of the tallest beam, and then sits on the top of the mast, twisting its body and grinning its teeth.
Chinese PinYin : zī yá liě zuǐ
show one's teeth
shave one 's head and become a monk. jiǎn fā pī zī
Success or failure depends on this. chéng bài zài cǐ yī jǔ
Break the family for the country. pò jiā wéi guó