To criticize a man
Guanfu curse seat, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Gu à NF à m à Zu à, which means that Guanfu scolds people after drinking, and describes them as upright and daring. It comes from the biography of marquis Wu'an of Wei Qi in historical records.
The origin of Idioms
Biography of marquis Wu'an of Wei Qi in historical records: Wu'an was angry, impeached and scolded his husband, and was disrespectful.
Idiom usage
As an object or attribute, it can be described as a person who is upright and dare to speak. Why don't you push the door and watch the bamboo? Why don't the prince take advantage of the public place, ask for the wine, point to the bottle, and then imitate the Guanfu. Chen Ruyuan of Ming Dynasty's Jinlian Ji Jiao Yu 2. Once, Tian Zhen invited Guanfu to Dou Ying's home. During the banquet, the Guanfu danced to belong to Tian Zhen. Tian Zhen deliberately refused to invite him to dance. He was so angry that he scolded Dou Ying and led to a dispute.
Idiom story
In 131 B.C., Tian Juan, Marquis of an Wu, married the daughter of King Yan. Dou Ying, the defeated Marquis of Wei Qi, and Guan Fu, the general, went to congratulate him on the order of the Empress Dowager. Guanfu toasted them, but Tian Zhen and his subordinates ignored them. Guanfu scolded them, and Tian Zhen arrested Guanfu's family. The Empress Dowager killed Guanfu, and Dou Ying was also killed by rumors.
To criticize a man
besiege a city to annihilate the enemy reinforce - wéi chéng dǎ yuán
Discard the last and return to the original - qì mò fǎn běn
Chapter eight of right biography - yòu chuán zhī bā zhāng
work shame-facedly with one's enemies - miǎn yán shì dí