Black and white
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is B á IH ē IDI ā nd ǎ o, meaning that there is no distinction between right and wrong. It comes from Liu Xiang's biography of women in the Western Han Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Liu Xiang of the Western Han Dynasty wrote in the biography of lienvzhuan chucheng Zhengxuan: "Wang didn't know clearly, so he was innocent. It's a reversal of black and white, and it's also a fallacy."
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: black and white; antonym: black and white
Idiom usage
As an object or attributive, it refers to a person's lack of judgment or intentional behavior. He often confuses right and wrong.
Chinese PinYin : bái hēi diān dǎo
Black and white
unable to suffer the humiliation made by the warder even if he is a whittled phoney one. kè mù wéi lì
There is no mending of the cloth. wéi bó bù xiū
both the higher and lower levels find themselves in a predicament. shàng xià jiāo kùn