please a treacherous person sextually
It is a Chinese idiom. Pinyin is y í ngji à nm à IQI à o, which means to show off one's beauty and seduce one's affairs. It comes from tie Guai Li by Yue Bochuan of Yuan Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
The second fold of "tie Guai Li" written by Yue Bochuan in Yuan Dynasty: "when a young man cries after pouring a memorial, he will shed two tears. He is afraid that there will be a first-class official who will meet the treachery and show off his beauty. He has forgotten to guard for three years."
Idiom usage
It is used as predicate and attribute
Examples
What's more, they are familiar with all kinds of methods. The fourth chapter of he Dian by Zhang Nanzhuang in Qing Dynasty
please a treacherous person sextually
elegant in manner , attitude and speech - wén cǎi fēng liú
a good man caught in difficult circumstances - yīng xióng qì duǎn
When the wind blows, the frost falls - hóng fēi shuāng jiàng
treat people differently according to preferment - kàn rén xíng shì