robbery
Dog barking warning, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Qu ǎ NF è izh ī J ǐ ng, refers to robbery, theft and so on. From the book of the Han Dynasty, biography of Xiongnu.
Idioms and allusions
[source]: Ban Gu of the Eastern Han Dynasty wrote "biography of Xiongnu in the Han Dynasty:" it was the battle of Yan Guan, the border city of the time, cattle and horses spreading wild, no dog barking in the third generation, and the death of Li Shu. "
Discrimination of words
Let's take an example to make a sentence: today, Yan Ran has no warning of barking, but he counts up and down. That is to say, once something happens, he will be sent back to the fourth generation? In the Ming Dynasty, Chen Zilong's "asking the ancients about the world, all the counties and cities 》[usage]: used as an object; used to describe a small disturbance
robbery
thousands upon thousands of horses and soldiers -- a powerful army - qiān jūn wàn mǎ
stainless in words but foul in deeds - xíng zhuó yán qīng
It's too fast to cover your ears - xùn léi bù jí yǎn ěr