one's wrath filled the sky
Angry, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is n ù Q ì ch ō ngTi ā n, which means angry up to the sky, describes the extreme anger. From Xiao Xiang Yu.
The origin of Idioms
The fourth part of xiaoxiangyu written by Yang Xianzhi in Yuan Dynasty: "he and I are very kind to each other. When we don't live in the sand, we are afraid of betraying our benefactor. We are angry, sad and angry."
Idiom usage
Subject predicate; used as predicate, attribute and adverbial; used in writing. In the 13th chapter of Zhang Chunfan's the sea of officials in Qing Dynasty, Ren was even more angry when he saw him. Chapter 34 of the outlaws of the marsh by Shi Naian of the Ming Dynasty: Qin Ming was angry and his forehead was smashed, but he saw a path on the side. Qin Ming grabbed the horse up the mountain. In the ninth chapter of the romance of the Three Kingdoms by Luo Guanzhong of the Ming Dynasty, except for the violent Lu Bu helping the situ criminal Chang'an, Li Bi listens to Jia Xu: Bu is furious and shouts. Chapter 42 of Li Baojia's Officialdom: FanTai has always had Mao's temper. When he heard this, he was very angry. In the officialdom, he repeatedly said, "we are here on business. If you leave us aside, you will have a good time to draw for others! What a shame! Chapter 25 of twenty years of witnessing the strange situation: "just now the countryman came running in anger and sweat." In Chapter 52 of the biography of Jingzhong Yue: "Niu Hu was so angry that he went out of the camp to kill Wang Zuo." Zheng Zhenduo's cat: I think he must be eating the poor bird's leg. In a moment of anger, he picked up a wooden stick leaning on the door of the building and ran after it.
one's wrath filled the sky
When a man is dying, his words are good - rén zhī jiāng sǐ,qí yán yě shàn
particularly brilliant in the ending - qǔ zhōng zòu yǎ
be present in person on the grand occasion - gōng féng qí shèng
a slanderous tongue can burn up a city - chì shé shāo chéng