out of order
Daofengdianluan, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is d ǎ of è ngdi ā NLU á n, which means that the order of metaphor is out of order. Old novels are used to describe men and women having sex. From the second fold of the fourth book of the romance of the Western chamber.
Analysis of Idioms
To turn a phoenix upside down
The origin of Idioms
The second fold of the fourth volume of the romance of the Western chamber by Wang Shifu in Yuan Dynasty: "you can make plans by embroidering the curtain, and you can turn the Phoenix and the Phoenix into a Phoenix."
Idiom usage
It is used to describe the intercourse between men and women. The two of them, in an instant, were dispersed. In Ming Dynasty, Hong Hui's qingpingshan hall story book, Fengyue Ruixian Pavilion, and Feng Menglong's Yushi Mingyan, Volume 38: "let's pour out the Phoenix and the clouds, and ask many talents to come early in Ming Dynasty."
out of order
If a scholar does not go out, he knows everything - xiù cái bù chū mén,quán zhī tiān xià shì
A scholar knows everything when he doesn't go out - xiù cái bù chū mén,quán zhī
add other things to an affair creating more difficulties - tiān zhī jiē yè