Stolen property
Stolen things, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is d à ozh í zh à w à, which means something robbed by thieves. It comes from Wu Jingzi's scholars.
Idiom usage
As an object; used of stolen goods
The origin of Idioms
The 38th chapter of the scholars written by Wu Jingzi in the Qing Dynasty: "this silver belongs to these people in the south of the Yangtze River. It is not stolen. How can you not accept it?"
Idiom explanation
Zhi: the name of a person. It is said that he was the leader of the uprising army in the pre Qin period. In the feudal society, he was called "stealing Zhi", which refers to the bad people. Something robbed by a thief.
Chinese PinYin : dào zhí zhī wù
Stolen property
marry into sb . 's house in an open , correct manner. míng méi zhèng lǐ
Swallow forehead and tiger head. yàn é hǔ tóu
commence business , now developed into a grand scale but with hardly anything to start with. téng kōng ér qǐ