hide a malicious intent
Harboring treachery, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is B ā OC á ngji ā nx ī n, which means harboring evil intentions. It comes from the annals of the Ming Dynasty written by Cao Cao of the Wei Dynasty.
source
"Liu Biao thought that he lived outside, harbored treachery, and looked at the world from the beginning to the end."
Discrimination of words
[pinyin code]: bcjx
Harboring evil intentions
Antonym: magnanimous mind
Lantern riddle: cheating bag
Harbourillintent
usage
It can be used as predicate or object to describe the appearance of being insidious and harming others secretly
hide a malicious intent
suffer many a setback during one 's life - mìng tú duō chuǎn
Pull on the lapels only to expose the elbows. —have too many difficulties to cope with - zhuō jīn zhǒu jiàn
confirmed habits are hard to get rid of - jī zhòng bù fǎn
except so-and-so , none of them was worth a dime - zì kuài yǐ xià