grill a prisoner
Liu Wen San Tui, a Chinese idiom, is Li ù w è ns ā NTU ī in pinyin, which means repeated interrogation. It's from mohello.
The origin of Idioms
The third part of Meng Hanqing's "moheluo" in Yuan Dynasty: "I'm a woman's family. How can I endure these six questions and three inferences?"
Idiom usage
It refers to repeated trial. Example: the second fold of yuan · Li Xingdao's "the story of the grey appendix" says: "I'm afraid that if I keep my seven chastity and nine martyrs, I'm afraid of six questions and three inferences, I'll be able to beat thousands of people in one term." As for those who are wronged, they ask questions and do exercises. Ling Mengchu, Ming Dynasty
grill a prisoner
all the stars twinkled around the bright moon - zhòng xīng cuán yuè
Only state officials are allowed to set fire, and people are not allowed to light lamps - zhǐxǔzhōu guān fàng huǒ,bùxǔbǎi xìng diǎn
Success is Xiao He, failure is Xiao He - chéng yě xiāo hé,bài yě xiāo hé