To make a fuss
Qiaoyajiequ, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is á oy á Ji é Q ū, which means that the words are difficult to read. From book shadow.
Idiom explanation
It's hard to say; it's hard to say; it's hard to say.
The origin of Idioms
The second volume of Book Shadow written by Zhou Lianggong in the Qing Dynasty: "for the sake of poetry, for the sake of language, there is no self explanation."
Idiom usage
Used as predicate, attribute, diction, etc. Example: in Jin Xue Jie written by Han Yu of Tang Dynasty, "Zhou Gao's Yin pan is a clumsy one."
To make a fuss
be unable to sit down or sleep at ease - zuò wò bù níng
accuse one falsely for receiving bribery - yì yǐ míng zhū
repeat the words of others like a parrot - yīng wǔ xué shé
have ready plans to meet a situation - chéng zhú zài xiōng
people who are actuated by high ideals - zhì shì rén rén