pose as a person of high morals
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is d à om à o à NR á n, which means serious and serious. It comes from Pu Songling's strange tales from a lonely studio, Cheng Xian.
Analysis of Idioms
Daomao: a serious look; Anran: an arrogant look. It means to look solemn and serious. It mostly means to pretend to be serious. It means to be serious and serious in appearance but dangerous in heart. [grammar] as predicate, attributive and adverbial [synonym] a man of integrity, a man of stern countenance, a man of dignified posture, a gentleman of upright posture, a man of serious appearance
The origin of Idioms
Pu Songling's strange tales from a lonely studio, Cheng Xian, in the Qing Dynasty: "in another 89 years, Cheng suddenly arrived, dressed in yellow scarves and coats, and looked like a real man." Seeing Duanfu's good looks, he didn't dare to make mistakes. Ji Yun's notes on Yuewei thatched cottage in the Qing Dynasty: "there are many people who jump faintly and show their secret pictures. When we look back at their shapes, we can see that they are all like the appearance." Chapter 144 of Wu Jianren's "strange situation witnessed in 20 years" in Qing Dynasty, Dunhuang bianwenji and Vimalakirti Sutra: "seeing vimalar naturally; awe inspiring; upright in appearance." "Seeing Duan Fu's moral integrity, I don't dare to make mistakes."
Idiom usage
Examples
Wang Shuo's Lord Xu: "fortunately, the author has not yet let his protagonist say those moral words to make the fallen repent." Dan Wei's green: "it's not like those hypocrites who have a good look. When they do harm to people, they have to paint on their faces and reprimand the victims."
Lantern riddle
Binjiang Road
Chinese PinYin : dào mào àn rán
pose as a person of high morals
leadership rendered ineffectual by recalcitrant subordinates. wěi dà nán diào
hubs hit hubs and shoulders rub shoulders. gǔ jī jiān mó
firm , resolute , plain and prudent. gāng yì mù nè
water flowing out in a trickle takes a long time to exhaust. xì shuǐ cháng liú