wolves
Jackal, wolf, tiger and leopard, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is ch á IL á NGH ǔ B à o, which means all kinds of beasts that harm people and animals. It's also a metaphor for a vicious villain. It comes from the eighth chapter of Lao Can's travels by Liu e of Qing Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
The eighth chapter of Liu e's Travels of Lao can in Qing Dynasty: "what's really terrible is jackals, tigers and leopards. It's late. If we come out, we'll be broken. "
Idiom usage
As an object, attribute, or villain. example the first is snake, mouse, insect and mosquito; the second is ~. In the first chapter of Wu Jianren's twenty years of witnessing the strange situation in the Qing Dynasty, there is a saying that "a man of talent matches a woman, a jackal matches a tiger and a leopard.".
wolves
Chanting the wind and the moon - yǒng cháo fēng yuè
bring disaster to the fish in the moat - yāng jí chí yú