Contending with each other
Competing for advantages and disadvantages is a Chinese idiom, and the Pinyin is zh ē ngdu ǎ NL ùù NCH á ng, which means to care about small differences; competing for who is up and who is down. It's from the first time.
The origin of Idioms
Ling Mengchu of the Ming Dynasty, Volume 20 of the book "the first moment is a time of adversity, and on the other hand is a rich family. There is no need to contend with each other. It has already said one thing and one thing." Yao xueyin "Li Zicheng" Volume I Chapter 5: "although sun chuanting is too sharp, sometimes he also ~, but he always looks from the big picture, to some unpleasant things with a smile."
Discrimination of words
Synonym: competing for advantages and disadvantages, competing for advantages and discussing disadvantages, competing for advantages and disadvantages
Idiom usage
To act as a predicate or attributive
Contending with each other
When the tree falls, the monkeys scatter - shù dǎo hú sūn sàn
No one in the court should be an official - cháo lǐ wú rén mò zuò guān
may the family prosper five generations running - wǔ shì qí chāng
harm the country and bring calamities on the people - wù guó yāng mín
withered trees and rotten stumps - kū niǎo xiǔ zhū
have the same likes and dislikes - qì wèi xiāng tóu