changes arise from the elbow and armpit . 2 . confusion starts from one 's side or friends
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is sh ì sh ēǒǒ uy è, which means that things happen around us. It comes from the biography of the Three Kingdoms, Shu annals and FA Zheng Zhuan.
Notes on Idioms
Elbow armpit: armpit.
Idiom usage
As a predicate or attributive, it refers to the events around us.
Examples
The thirty second chapter of Zeng Pu's "Nie Hai Hua" in Qing Dynasty: "the failure of Jing Song's guarding Taiwan was due to Li Wenkui's internal change. This internal change was too complicated to prevent."
The origin of Idioms
According to the history of the Three Kingdoms, the history of Shu and the true biography of FA, "the Lord is in gong'an. He is afraid of Cao Gong's strength in the north, Sun Quan's force in the East, and Sun Fu's change in life in the near future. When he is here, he will advance and retreat."
changes arise from the elbow and armpit . 2 . confusion starts from one 's side or friends
a broken mirror joined together - pò jìng chóng yuán
plagiarize from different sources - dōng chāo xī xí
see the head of the magic dragon but not its tail - shén lóng jiàn shǒu
make endless exorbitant demands on - zhū qiú wú yǐ
to hold back from taking action against an evildoer for fear of involving good people - zhì shǔ jì qì