It's all over the wall
The Chinese idiom, Pinyin is sh ì Z à IXI à oqi á ng, which means trouble comes from inside. It comes from the Analects of Confucius Ji Shi.
Idiom usage
It refers to the civil strife, the example, the provocation of other people, and the matter is in the wall. Biography of Nanke prefect by Li Gongzuo in Tang Dynasty
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: disaster rises from the wall
The origin of Idioms
In the Analects of Confucius, Ji Shi said, "I'm afraid that Ji sun's worries are not in Zhuan Yu, but in Xiaoqiang."
Idiom explanation
It is said that misfortune comes from the inside. Xiaoqiang is a small wall in the palace.
Chinese PinYin : shì zài xiāo qiáng
It's all over the wall
recall one 's sufferings in the old society and contrast them with the happiness in the new. yì kǔ sī tián
Self abandonment and self violence. zì qì zì bào
a person who returns to a place he once abandoned. qián dù liú láng
become destitute and homeless. liú luò shī suǒ
Different furnace of ice charcoal. bīng tàn bù tóng lú