Fawning
Fawning, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is t ō um è IQ ǔ R ó ng, which means flattering to please others. It comes from Zhang Ji, the emperor of the court and the opposition.
Idiom explanation
Flattery to please.
Idiom usage
To act as a predicate or attributive
Analysis of Idioms
Flattering and stealing
The origin of Idioms
Zhang Zhuo, Tang Dynasty, wrote in Zhang Ji, the emperor of the imperial court and the emperor of the imperial court and the emperor of the people's Republic of China: "it's also the sinner of the real name religion who steals and flatters."
Idiom story
During the period of Wu Zhou in Tang Dynasty, the officialdom was corrupt and there were many people who fawned on each other. The most typical one was Zhang Ji. In order to please Wu Zetian's lover monk Xue Shi, he followed him with a yellow silk. When he met Xue Shi, he crawled to the ground as a stirrup. There are also shiyushi Guoba personally taste to Junchen's excrement, song Zhiwen for Zhang Yizhi holding toilet and so on
Fawning
Quiet words do not mean to disobey - jìng yán yōng wéi
Three fists are not equal to four hands - sān quán bù dí sì shǒu
things that reopen sb . 's wound - chù wù shāng qíng