make a fuss
Make a fuss, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is d à Zu à w é nzh à ng, which means that in order to achieve a certain purpose, some problems arise, or borrow a topic to expand the situation. From letters to Li Bingzhong.
The origin of Idioms
Lu Xun's collection of letters to Li Bingzhong: "I've seen several reprints of a previous letter, and some people have even made a fuss about it, either destroying or praising it."
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym] make a fuss, make a fuss, create twists and turns, and [antonym] be aboveboard
Idiom usage
The verb object type is used as predicate and has a derogatory meaning. He's writing a lot about this little thing to deal with you.
make a fuss
If there is a thing, there is a reason - shì yǒu bì zhì,lǐ yǒu gù rán
Anger comes from the heart, and evil comes from the gallbladder - nù cóng xīn shàng qǐ,è xiàng dǎn biān shēng
give the rulers less while give the civilians more - sǔn shàng yì xià
various difficulties and hardships - fēng shuāng yǔ xuě