Thundering cauldron
Lei Ming wa cauldron is a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is l é im í NGW ǎ f ǔ, which means that people with no virtue and talent occupy a high position and have a strong momentum.
explain
Kettle: pot.
Source of allusion
In the book of songs of Chu · Buju: "Huang Zhong destroys and abandons, while the ruins of a tile are thundering. A slanderer is highly praised, but a sage is nameless. "
words whose meaning is similar
Huang Zhong's destruction and abandonment
English translation
anearthenpotsoundinglikethunder
Idiom information
Explanation of idiom: kettle: pot. idiom example: Song Xin Qiji's "water dragon chant · with ladle spring rhyme": "Qian who and ask, Lei Ming tile kettle, very yellow bell dumb?" degree of common use: rare emotional color: commendatory words
usage
Idiom structure: contractive type generation time: ancient times
Thundering cauldron
bowelless gentleman -- nickname of the crab - wú cháng gōng zǐ
to do good and dissuade him from doing evil - quàn shàn jiè è