voices of discontent
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is B ē ISH ē ngz à ID à o, which means that the sound of sad calls fills the road. To describe hardship. From the oath of duty.
Idiom explanation
The sound of a cry of grief filling the road. To describe hardship.
The origin of Idioms
Hong Xiuquan of the Taiping Heavenly Kingdom wrote in his oath of Duty: "women sigh and children cry, and their voices are full of sorrow; torture is thick and restrained, and they are full of resentment."
Idiom usage
It refers to suffering
voices of discontent
all that have been achieved is spoiled - qián gōng jìn miè
one must be thorough in exterminating an evil - chú è wù běn
bitterness ends and happiness begins - kǔ jìn tián lái