Bad intentions
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is x ī NSH ù B ù Du ā n, which means that the heart is not decent, bad intentions. From Yu Shi Ming Yan.
The origin of Idioms
Feng Menglong of Ming Dynasty, the 27th volume of Yu Shi Ming Yan: "it's funny that Mo Ji only thinks about today's wealth, but forgets the poor and humble season, and turns his wife's contribution to fame into spring water. It's his bad idea."
Analysis of Idioms
A synonym for "evil mind"
Idiom usage
It means that people are not right. Chapter 73 of Cao Xueqin's a dream of Red Mansions in the Qing Dynasty: after hearing this, Baoyu knows that Aunt Zhao is not good at her own tricks, she is like her own enemy, and she doesn't know what he says. Just like sun Dasheng hearing the curse of hoop son, she is not at ease with all her limbs. Chapter 83 of Shi Yukun's three swordsmen and five righteousness in Qing Dynasty: soon after, I saw Ma Chaoxian, the general manager, who was deceiving and rebellious, deliberately plotting to commit adultery, with tears in his eyes, and a lot of bad intentions. Chapter 84 of a dream of Red Mansions: "when did you hide again, you can see that it's also a product with bad intentions."
Bad intentions
Lions and elephants fight rabbits with all their strength - shī xiàng bó tù,jiē yòng quán lì
lower one 's banners and muffle one 's drums - yǎn qí xī gǔ
Sea, water and mulberry fields - hǎi shuǐ sāng tián
wait on the guests and laugh and sing for money - yǐ mén xiàn xiào