abusable
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is è y ǔ sh ā NgR é n, which means slandering and hurting people with vicious language. From "five Lantern Festival yuan · Hongzhou Fachang Yiyu Zen master".
The origin of Idioms
In the book of five Lantern Festival yuan Hongzhou Fachang Yiyu Zen master by Shi Puji of Song Dynasty, it is said that the sharp knife cuts the flesh and the sores are still the same, and the vicious words hurt people and can't be sold
Idiom usage
It has a derogatory meaning. Example other people's sweet words, three warm in winter, I come to, ill words, cold in June. The second discount of the third volume of the romance of the Western chamber by Wang Shifu in Yuan Dynasty
abusable
Failure is the mother of success - shī bài wéi chéng gōng zhī mǔ
prey upon one 's country and injure the people - dù guó hài mín
not to follow a set pattern of action - bù zhǔ gù cháng