make impertinent remarks
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is k ǒ uch ū B ù x ù n, which means to say something very humble. From the romance of the Three Kingdoms.
Notes on Idioms
Humility: humility and obedience.
The origin of Idioms
Chapter 74 of the romance of the Three Kingdoms by Luo Guanzhong of the Ming Dynasty: "but he said that Guan Gong was sitting in the tent when he suddenly approached his horse and reported:" Cao Cao was inferior to ban and led seven strong soldiers to come. Pound, the vanguard in the front of the army, carried a wooden vessel and swore to fight the general to the death. The soldiers are thirty miles away from the city. "
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym]: rude and [antonym]: polite
Idiom usage
He is very modest. example CHONGYING Biao's eloquence, please make a decision by the prime minister's military order. The 28th chapter of Feng Shen Yan Yi by Xu Zhonglin in Ming Dynasty
make impertinent remarks
to live is like being a lodger in the world , and to die is like returning home - shēng jì sǐ guī
soldiers and horses are in great haste -- busily engaged in warfare - róng mǎ kǒng zǒng