Diseased people poison the country
The Chinese idiom, Pinyin is B ì NGM í ng ǔ Gu ó, which means to harm the country and the people. It's from Shi nodding, greedy, six courtyards of Han Dynasty.
Idiom explanation
Harm the people and the country.
The origin of Idioms
In the Ming Dynasty, the natural fool Shi nodou was greedy and sold in the six courtyards of the Han Dynasty: "in the past, Liu Yan and sang Hongyang made all their profits, but they never suffered from the disease of the country and the people. Later generations still say that they gathered money."
Idiom usage
Structure: United style example: Volume 5 of notes of Yuewei thatched cottage written by Ji Yun of the Qing Dynasty: "we can't be enemies when we are sick and poison our country, so are the law enforcers now."
Chinese PinYin : bìng mín gǔ guó
Diseased people poison the country
leave only after each has enjoyed himself to the utmost. jìn huān ér sàn
in a melon patch or under a plum tree. lǐ xià guā tián
assume the appearance of a man of integrity. àn rán dào mào
not to cause the slightest damage to the people. bǐ chàng wú jīng
where the wind passes , the grass bends -- influence of gentlemen. fēng xíng cǎo cóng