devils
Evil spirit and evil spirit, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Xi à ngsh é n è sh à, originally refers to the evil god, later used to describe a very evil person. From the peach blossom girl by Wang Ye of Yuan Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
The third fold of the peach blossom girl by Wang Ye in Yuan Dynasty: "if you are so vicious, you must be stiff and die."
Idiom usage
In Xu Dishan's heart of the daughter, it is said that "master Hei is also a dough, and his belly is not like before." Ma Yixiang's Chaoyang Hua: "chapter one when you see Jin Si and his family members, you will know what's going on."
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms: monsters and ghosts, the devil king, the eagle looking at the wolf, the owl looking at the wolf
devils
kind heart and soft countenance - xīn cí miàn ruǎn
liquor talks mighty loud when it gets loose from the jug - jiǔ hòu wú dé
unnecessary and overelaborate formalities - fán wén rù jié