Snake heart and Buddha mouth

Snake heart and Buddha mouth

Snake heart Buddha mouth, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is sh é x ī NF ó K ǒ u, which means that although the metaphor sounds good, the heart is very vicious. From the five Lantern Festival.

The origin of Idioms

Volume 20 of five Lantern Festival yuan written by Shi Puji of Song Dynasty: "all Buddhas were born, robbed and killed, their ancestors came to the west, blowing wind and setting fire, good knowledge in ancient and modern times, Buddhists' tongue and snake's heart, and the monks of the world threw themselves into the cage."

Analysis of Idioms

Synonym: Buddha's tongue and snake's heart

Idiom usage

It is used as object, complement and attribute

Examples

Wang Kui, if you are vicious, I'll go to the yellow spring, and I'll take you as my evil soul. I'm sure you'll break up with me. Wang Yufeng, Ming Dynasty

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