unpleasant
Shentouguimian is a Chinese idiom. Its pinyin is sh é NT ó ugu à mi à n, which means a metaphor of strange appearance. From Dagong Zhongzhi.
The origin of Idioms
In answer to Gong Zhongzhi written by Zhu Xi of Song Dynasty: "the poems of the ancients were not intended to be plain. But for today's crazy monsters and ghosts, we can see their level. "
Idiom usage
It is used as predicate, object and attribute.
Examples
Sentence carved words, called noise redundant teeth, ghosts, that novel. The diary of Shuidong (Volume 26) by Ye Sheng in Ming Dynasty
unpleasant
repeat the words of others like a parrot - yīng wǔ xué shé
the sweet grass and the smelly grass store in the same ware - xūn yóu tóng qì
Three people, there must be my teacher - sān rén xíng,bì yǒu wǒ shī
Take advantage of the light and drive the fat - chéng qīng qū féi
for having heard it many times - ěr shú néng xiáng