What Is an Ambidextrous Person?
Bastard, Chinese words, slang words, pronunciation hún dàn. It means unreasonable and unreasonable; it also means unreasonable people, bad guys. "Bastard" is a "chaos" that spreads rebuke to behavior, turning it into an insult to people.
- [hún dàn]
- "Chaos" means not making clear what needs to be said, which makes people indistinguishable from whom and what. Therefore, "chaos" is a reprimand, not a curse, because the master of the mansion door is in control, and will not swear at the servant without a sense of identity. As long as the word "roll", he will smash his rice bowl. Moreover, "chaos" is an evaluation of the results of language expressions, not an evaluation of people.
- After the "chaos" spread to the market, it was changed by word of mouth. From "Hundun" and "Hundan", and then written according to this sound, according to personal understanding, there were "faint eggs" and "muddle eggs". And "jerk" in three different ways, and these three ways of expression mean three different levels of meaning.
- "Badhead" means that this person is faint and confused; "Buddlehead" means that this person is not clear about any problems, and a lot of problems are confused; "Bastard" means that this person is somewhat "mixed" To the point of "crazy and entangled."
- Both "fainting" and "unstable" are evaluations of people. Adding the word "egg" has an insulting element, and "jerk" is purely cursing.
- 1. Slang words. Means unreasonable, unreasonable; also means unreasonable; bad guy
- Lao She's "Liu Tun": "Which old man is asshole." Wang Xiyan's "Night Banquet" one: "This abominable thing! What a bastard!" Wei Junyi, "Like a current year, a girl from a bourgeois family": "But the Kuomintang It's too jerk, they call the surrender "good neighbors."
- 2. Refers to unreasonable people, bad guys.
- Bing Xin's "Girls in the Winter, Our Wife's Living Room": "What critics are a group of bastards!" Cao Yu's "Thunderstorm" Act 4: "You are a bastard who has no blood and only cares about himself." "Four Neighbors": "In his eyes, the winners are some bastards."