Young men fresh from school are uncompromising despite pressure from above.
A newborn calf is not afraid of tigers. The Pinyin ch ū sh ē ngzh ī D ú B ù w è IH ǔ is a metaphor for young people who are not experienced in the world to dare to say, dare to do and have no fear.
explain
It means that young people who are not experienced in the world dare to say, dare to do and have no fear.
source
Yao xueyin's Li Zicheng (Volume I), Chapter 14: "just after breakfast, all the people gathered together. Some people were shocked by the fame of Chuang Wang and Li Guo, but some people were like newborn calves, fearless of tigers, waiting for fighting."
usage
As an object, attribute, clause; of young people
Analysis of Idioms
Phonetic notation: ㄔㄨㄕㄥㄓㄧㄉㄨㄨㄅㄨㄨㄟㄏㄨ idiom structure: subject predicate idiom generation time: Contemporary idiom synonym fearless, newborn calf fearless of tiger antonym timid [example] I see you two, are really newborn calf fearless of tiger! Guangdong opera soushuyuan
Idiom story
At the end of the Eastern Han Dynasty, Liu Bei took advantage of the contradiction between Cao Cao and Sun Quan and ordered Guan Yu to lead his army northward to attack Xiangyang and Fancheng. Cao Cao sent Cao Ren to lead the troops and was defeated by Guan Yu's general Liao Hua. Pound led his army to fight Guan Yu. It was hard for both sides to decide. Guan Yu said to his subordinates that pound was a newborn calf and was not afraid of tigers. He had to use tricks to subdue him
Young men fresh from school are uncompromising despite pressure from above.
rosy lips and pretty white teeth - chǐ bái chún hóng
in a flurry of excitement , he flapped his sleeves and rose - fèn mèi ér qǐ
There is no righteous war in the spring and Autumn period - chūn qiū wú yì zhàn
there is nothing one does not understand - wú suǒ bù tōng