Pluck one's teeth
Pozuzuanliao, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is B ō Zu ǐ Li á oy á, which means to stir up right and wrong. It comes from the Peony Pavilion.
The origin of Idioms
Tang Xianzu of the Ming Dynasty wrote in the Peony Pavilion: there is a Polygonum Valley in the middle. The Ming Dynasty helped the fan family to fight the Han family. In the middle of a communication, you have to pick your teeth. "
Idiom usage
It is used as predicate to describe gossip.
Pluck one's teeth
All changes are inseparable from their ancestors - wàn biàn bù lí qí zōng
as rolling a ball down a slope - bǎn shàng zǒu wán