point at the chicken and curse the dog
Pointing at the chicken and cursing at the dog is a Chinese idiom. The Pinyin is zh ǐ J ī m à g ǒ, which means pointing at the chicken and cursing at the dog. It means to scold one person on the surface, but actually to scold another person. From Zhou Libo's storm.
The origin of Idioms
Zhou Libo's "storm" part I: "Sister Li, don't point fingers at chickens and scold dogs, but who eats and drinks for nothing?"
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: refers to mulberry curse locust.
Idiom usage
If you have something to say, you don't have to scold the dog.
point at the chicken and curse the dog
unable to fly even with a pair of wings - chā chì nán táo
be greedy of eating and lazy in doing work - tān chī lǎn zuò
at the death of one 's father or mother - qì xuè jī sǎng
though one has a home one cannot go to it - yǒu jiā nán bēn
be toughened and hardened into steel - bǎi liàn chéng gāng