a person 's arrogance stinks to heaven
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is Q ì y à nx ū NTI ā n, which means to describe domineering and arrogant. It comes from the 41st chapter of a brief history of civilization by Li Baojia of Qing Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
The 41st chapter of Li Baojia's a brief history of civilization in the Qing Dynasty: "the governor of bishikang is full of splendor. He doesn't see the ordinary way. Because he is a relative, he still meets from time to time."
Idiom usage
"Who dares to be the only one who can't see the sky full of fireworks?" is the main predicate type, the predicate and the object The fifth chapter of Nie Hai Hua: "it's the call in the hall, the promise in the hall; it's the smoke in the sky, and Gongqing's shoes fall." Chapter 37 of Li Baojia's Officialdom: no one dares to disobey him.
a person 's arrogance stinks to heaven
influence the people and form moral customs - huà mín chéng sú
be really a most unusual and quite individual beauty - fēng huá jué dài
improve one 's virtue and refine one 's achievements - jìn dè xiū yè
run after the less important things - qì běn zhú mò
a makeshift to tide over a present difficulty - wān ròu chéng chuāng
like " cutting and grinding " stones -- to learn from each other - rú qiē rú cuō
spout a lot of erroneous opinions - dà fā miù lùn