Break the treachery
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is p ò Ji ā NF ā f ú, which means to expose the hidden villain. It comes from the Shinto inscription of Duke Hu in Xijing, the branch of Wei Wei Shaoqing in Song Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Fan Zhongyan of the Song Dynasty wrote the Shinto inscription of Duke Hu in Xijing, the former Wei Wei Shaoqing branch of the Song Dynasty: "he moved to Longcheng County, Libi and Jiaer wailang, who had been in the county for a few years. He broke the treachery and became a God."
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or object; used in writing
Chinese PinYin : pò jiān fā fú
Break the treachery
climb trees to catch water from a flint. yuán mù qiú yú
debauch people and turn them into gangsters. huì yín huì dào
wait till the yellow river runs clear water. sì hé zhī qīng
White heads come back together. bái shǒu tóng guī