Snake shadow on the wall
Snake shadow on the wall is a Chinese word. Its pinyin is B ì Ji ā NSH é y ǐ ng, which means to describe being suspicious and disturbing. It comes from the strange god of customs.
The origin of Idioms
According to Han yingshao's "custom communication · strange god", Du Xuan drank wine and saw that there was a snake in the cup. After drinking, he felt pain in his chest and abdomen, which could not be cured in many ways. Later, he learned that the red crossbow hanging on the wall was shining on the cup, which was like a snake, and his illness was cured. There is a similar record in the book of Jin · Yue Guang Zhuan. if you can't break it here, then the old people's so-called ~, which is suspicious enough to cause disease. --Tang Shunzhi's answer to Wang Longxi's doctor's letter in Ming Dynasty
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: bow and snake
Idiom usage
If you can't find out a little bit about it here, then the old people's so-called ~, which is enough to cause suspicion and disease. Tang Shunzhi's answer to Wang Longxi's doctor's letter in Ming Dynasty
Snake shadow on the wall
Never forget the past, the teacher of the future - qián shì bù wàng,hòu shì zhī shī
hold one 's head high and gaze at the sky - áng shǒu wàng tiān
strike an attitude of half-declining and half-accepting so as to provoke the other party to greater or more ardent efforts or to a more agreeable offer - bàn tuī bàn jiù