angry
Wumingyehuo, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is w ú m í ngy è Hu ǒ, which means anger. From man Tingfang, a gift to Mr. Zhao Lei.
The origin of Idioms
Jin · Ma Yu's poem "man Tingfang, a gift to Mr. Zhao Lei" says: stop your unprofessional career, let alone think about it. Fame and wealth are related.
Idiom usage
Used as an object or attribute; used in writing. The third chapter of Ming Shi Naian's outlaws of the Marsh: "Zheng TU was furious, and two lines of anger rushed from the bottom of his feet to the top door. The flame of wumingye can't hold it. He grabs a sharp knife from the meat case and jumps down. " Shi Naian's Water Margin chapter 31: after listening to Wu Song's story, he broke through the blue sky with a fire of unprofessional career. Ming Shi Naian's outlaws of the marsh Chapter 47: after listening to Li Ying, he raised his unprofessional career to three thousand feet and could not accept it. He cried out: "Chuang Ke, prepare my horse quickly!" The 15th volume of Feng Menglong's ancient and modern novels in Ming Dynasty: "two lines of anger run from the sole of the foot to the top door. There is no open fire in my heart. I can't restrain it."
angry
high carriage and four horses -- symbol of wealth and nobility - sì mǎ xuān chē
good writings make people copy them - luò yáng zhǐ guì
remember the kindness until death - sǐ qiě bù xiǔ
profound in substance and beautiful in style - chén bó jué lì