Swearing
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is l ì y í w é izh í, which means reversing black and white and slandering good people. It comes from Shen De Fu of Ming Dynasty.
Idiom explanation
Swearing: swearing; Yi: Boyi; Zhi: stealing Zhi. It refers to scolding Boyi as a thief.
Idioms and allusions
[source] Shen Defu's "Ye Huo Bian · Yan Shi · Yan Guan's loss of one word" in the Ming Dynasty: "there are countless other people who are popular, swear at others and abandon the famous religion."
Discrimination of words
[pinyin code]: lywz [synonym]: reversing black and white [usage]: used as predicate and attribute; refers to right and wrong
Chinese PinYin : lì yí wéi zhí
Swearing
city of strong fortification. shí chéng tāng chí
bid farewell to a departing friend. yáng guān sān dié
A hundred examples and a hundred victories. bǎi jǔ bǎi jié
the country governed by a young monarch is unstable. zhǔ shǎo guó yí