give occasion for scandal
It's a Chinese idiom. Its pinyin is y í R é NK ǒ ush í, which means to leave a handle for someone who speaks carelessly. It's from the book of history, Zhonghui's Gao.
Idiom explanation
Yi: leave behind; eloquence: talk.
The origin of Idioms
"In the book of history, Zhong Hui's Gao said," I'm afraid that I will take Taiwan as my mouth in the future. " Zhu Zhiyu of Ming Dynasty wrote twenty five Sutras of keeping the covenant with the East: "if we can achieve success with each other and recite them to others in the future, then everyone will be angry to learn, and their parents will respect their teachers and Fu. If we can't achieve success, we will make other people talk."
Idiom usage
As a predicate or object, it means to leave a handle. The world continued to know its hidden, said to Emperor Guangxu, that qingkuan is a person appreciated by the prince, the father's merit, the son's sin, it is inevitable. (notes of Nanting by Li Baojia in Qing Dynasty Volume 2)
give occasion for scandal
equally difficult to go on or retreat - jìn tuì shī cuò
abolish punishment with punishment - yǐ xíng zhǐ xíng
bring disaster to the fish in the moat - yāng jí chí yú