encourage monsters to stalk abroad , making trouble , causing disorder
Make trouble, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is x ī ngy ā Ozu ò Gu à I, meaning that bad people destroy and make trouble, or bad ideas expand influence. It's from the second episode of West Lake, saving the golden carp and the Dragon King.
Analysis of Idioms
Make waves, make trouble, make trouble
The origin of Idioms
In the second episode of West Lake, rescuing the golden carp, the Dragon King and repaying virtue, compiled by the Ming Dynasty and Zhou Dynasty: "patrol the sea, yecha said: 'you have these things there, and you are making trouble here!"
Idiom usage
It has a derogatory meaning. In this way, it seems that Zhang Yi is making a monkey out of it. The fourth act of Qu Yuan by Guo Moruo and the new story of cutting lamp by Qu you in Ming Dynasty, Volume 3: notes of Yongzhou wild Temple: "Ying Xiang hears words and knows that he is a snake demon. It's a case of saying that it's harmful to people and things, and that it's a case of making mischief. "Xingshihengyan. Vol.13. The God of Erlang, the God of leather boots:" under the emperor's chariot, he always dares to be bold and make mischief. 」
encourage monsters to stalk abroad , making trouble , causing disorder
place obstruction at every possible points - héng zhē shù dǎng
not resigned to playing second fiddle - bù gān shì ruò
a hundred responses to a hundreds - yī hū bǎi yìng