be condemned out of one 's own mouth
Li Qu CI Qiong, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is l ǐ Q ū C í Qi ó ng, which means there is nothing to say because of Li Kui. From the Analects of Confucius advanced.
The origin of Idioms
Confucius' "the Analects of Confucius · advanced" in pre Qin period: "it's an evil man and a sycophant of Song Dynasty. Zhu Xi's annotation:" Zilu's words are not the original meaning, but his reasoning is poor, and he uses his mouth to defend people's ears. "
Idiom usage
"Like a tyrant who is suddenly trapped in, he puts out his last card at once."
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym] tongue tied, speechless and speechless; [antonym] righteous, upright and eloquent
be condemned out of one 's own mouth
indulge in malpractices and obtain private advantages - wǔ bì yíng sī
The wind comes from behind the ears - ěr hòu shēng fēng
Those who follow will prosper and those who go against will perish - shùn zhī zhě xīng,nì zhī zhě wáng