A fault conceals a good one
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Ju é Xi á y ǎǎ NY ú, which means deliberately picking on the spots on jade to hide its brilliance. It refers to deliberately criticizing other people's shortcomings and shortcomings, while erasing their advantages and advantages. From refuting Lu Chen.
The origin of Idioms
Yan Ying's Refutation of Lu Chen in Tang Dynasty: "today, I often discuss the politics of Jingnan in detail It's a theory of criticizing flaws and concealing virtues. It's not an appropriate one. "
Idiom usage
To be an object or attribute; to be critical
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms: nitpicking and total negation
Chinese PinYin : jué xiá yǎn yú
A fault conceals a good one
withered trees and rotten stumps. kū niǎo xiǔ zhū
in one 's seventies and eighties. qī lǎo bā dǎo
Cultivate food and accumulate grass. tún liáng jī cǎo