Stupid: The way a reptile crawls. Metaphor means that the enemy is ready to attack or the bad guys are plotting to make trouble.
The origin of the idiom "Different Garden Jurong Water Vein" by Liu Jingshu in the Southern Dynasties: "Dig up a black object, which has no beginning or end, and is like hundreds of hooves, tens of feet long, and move like a fool."
Idiom Example: The enemy in the stronghold is ready to move again.
traditional writing: 惷惷惷
phonetic notation :ㄔㄨㄣㄔㄨㄣㄧㄩㄨㄣㄨㄨㄣ.
The antonym of
The Appearance of Officialdom: Hold your horses: the commander stops the army, temporarily stops moving, and waits for the fighter plane; it is a metaphor to wait and see the development of the situation after accepting the task
Idiom grammar: partial formality; As predicate and object; It is derogatory to describe being ready to do something at any time.
Usage: common idiom
Emotion. Color: derogatory idiom
Idiom structure: more formal idiom
Date of birth: ancient idiom
English translation: ready to make trouble
Russian translation: зако. De > ans werk zu gehen versuchen < ein gewagtes spiel starten wollen>
idiom riddle: preparation order
pronunciation note: stupid, can't be pronounced "chūn".
note: stupid, you can't write "spring".
Two-part allegorical saying: The long worm that entered the sting returned to Yang.