ill attempt
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Hu à IR é nx à NSH à, which means to make people depressed and depressed. It comes from Zhu Shunshui's collection of eight questions about Anton's keeping the promise (Part one).
The origin of Idioms
Zhu Zhiyu of Ming Dynasty wrote eight questions (one) in Zhu Shunshui's collection of Zhu Shunshui's answers to Anton's adherence to the covenant: "if you can really learn, like a mirror hanging, how can you be moved by that thing and harm people's mind?"
Idiom usage
All the books which are obscene, pornographic, evil, and offend the Ming religion with her husband are accepted and burned. Qian Yong's Lu Yuan Cong Hua Zhong De in Qing Dynasty
Chinese PinYin : huài rén xīn shù
ill attempt
a scoundrel hates persons of integrity. dào zēng zhǔ rén
attitude of the confucian school for the appointment. yòng xíng cáng shě