A knife in the neck
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is zh ě ng ē Z ì R è n, which means preparing to kill the enemy for revenge. It comes from refuting Kang Youwei's theory of revolution.
Notes on Idioms
Blade, insert the object with the sword.
The origin of Idioms
Zhang Binglin's Refutation of Kang Youwei's book on revolution said, "this is a matter that can't be applied to Bai Xiang by Qin and Zhao dynasties, but can be applied to Manchuria by Han nationality. Zhang Zhangming has it."
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attributive; used in writing.
A knife in the neck
act in undue confidence of one 's own ability and look down upon others - fù cái ào wù
Saving a life is better than building a seven level floating butcher - jiù rén yī mìng,shèng zào qī jí fú tú
A thousand miles is still a face - qiān lǐ yóu miàn
be hard to refuse for the sake of friendship - qíng miàn nán què