daring to voice and act
Dare to anger, dare to speak, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is g ǎ NN ù g ǎ NY á n, meaning dare to anger, and dare to speak out. It comes from the marriage story of awakening the world.
The origin of Idioms
In the first chapter of the romance of awakening the world in the Western Zhou Dynasty in the Qing Dynasty: "although the Ji family still dare to be angry and dare to speak, they dare to act even if they can't afford Chao Dashe."
Idiom usage
It means to dare to say. I like her aggressive character.
daring to voice and act
the clouds disperse and the sun appears - yún kāi jiàn rì
the refugees are mourning sorrowfully - hóng yàn āi míng