Bruxism
Chuo Mao Suo ban is a Chinese idiom. Its pinyin is Chu ī m á OSU ǒ B ā n, which means to blow open the scar on the skin. It is used to refer to deliberately finding fault with others and looking for mistakes. From: Yang Wenqian, a talk on three borrowed Lu pen written by Zou Zhen in Qing Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
"Tian (Tian Wenyu) thought that he was being accosted by himself. The more evil he was, the worse he felt when he was angry and drunk, the worse he was."
Analysis of Idioms
Short for: nitpicking, nitpicking
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate, attributive, or object; used of deliberate nitpicking
Bruxism
make comments about the good or the evil of a character - yuè dàn chūn qiū
a mountain of paper work and a sea of meetings - wén shān huì hǎi
talk in a wild disorderly manner - hú shuō luàn dào
follow correct opinions or well-intentioned advice like water flowing swiftly and smoothly downward - cóng shàn rú liú