Fierce and fierce
The idiom "ferocious and cruel" means: to describe ferocious and surly. The idiom comes from "the history of Jin" in the Yuan Dynasty, volume 111: "the tower is cruel and ferocious. It's good for making villains, but it doesn't listen to the control of the imperial court."
Entry
Fierce and fierce
Pinyin
zhìhěnlánglì
Foreign language translation
Crimeofferociousingfirmwolf
The origin of Idioms
Volume 111 of the history of the Jin Dynasty in Yuan Dynasty: "the pagoda is cruel and ferocious. It is easy to form villains and does not listen to the control of the imperial court."
Related idioms
They are close to each other, respect their age, follow the wind and the sun, change every day, plant every day and gain every day, the son of the thief's wife, respect their sons more than their daughters, cherish their own happiness, and speak up
Chinese PinYin : zhì hěn láng lì
Fierce and fierce
Three festivals and two longevity. sān jié liǎng shòu
There's nothing to be ashamed of. jì yán wú suǒ
Cut the heart and cut the tongue. cái xīn lòu shé
try to make an ox drink by forcing his head into the water. niú bù hē shuǐ qiǎng àn tóu