It's dangerous
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is zh ū B ē Ig ǒ Uli ǎ n, which means to refer to a mean and insidious person. It comes from the biography of Kabin, the book of the Southern Qi Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
According to the biography of Kabin in the book of the Southern Qi Dynasty, "bin also looks at the animals and says:" sheep are obscene and ruthless in nature, pigs are inferior and rash in nature, geese are stubborn and proud in nature, and dogs are dangerous in nature. They all denounce the noble power. "
Idiom usage
As an object, attribute, or villain.
It's dangerous
be rapid in composary a piece of writing of a thousand words - yǐ mǎ qiān yán
manage household affairs and provide for a family - dǐng mén lì hù
the time hangs heavy on one 's hands - bǎi wú liáo lài