Stir up trouble
In Chinese, Pinyin is p á ngy á oy ī NSH ā n, which means to incite people everywhere. It comes from Pan Yinchuan's contribution to the river course.
The origin of Idioms
Zhang Juzheng of the Ming Dynasty wrote in his book a reply to pan Yinchuan's comments on the achievements of the river course: "when we recall the beginning of the incident, the speakers swarmed up, and those who were envious of the success or failure stirred up the flames. It's just a conspiracy."
Analysis of Idioms
To stir up the flames
Idiom usage
As a predicate, attribute, adverbial; used in dealing with affairs
Stir up trouble
red beans that inspire the memory of one 's love - hóng dòu xiāng sī