Get out of the skin
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Zu ā NP í ch ū y ǔ, which means to boast about one's preference. It comes from the ode to the disease and evil of pricking the world written by Zhao Yi of Han Dynasty.
Idiom explanation
It is a metaphor for someone who is eager to boast about his preference.
The origin of Idioms
Zhao Yi's Ci Shi Ji Xie Fu: "if you are good, you will get rid of the skin and get rid of the scar.
Idiom usage
It's formal, attributive and derogatory.
Examples
Wei zhengzhuan, a new book of the Tang Dynasty: "good means ~, evil means cleaning the dirt."
The seventh part of Yao Ying's "on poems and quatrains" in Qing Dynasty: "a kind of natural sculpture, what can later generations compete to drill skin?"
Get out of the skin
may the family prosper five generations running - wǔ shì qí chāng