offend public decency
The Chinese idiom, sh à ngji à ob à is ú in pinyin, means to corrupt education and customs. From the words of sin.
The origin of Idioms
Ma Zhongxi's "sin Yan" in Ming Dynasty: "today's Taoists are simple and unreasonable. If they are buried in a good place, they will be lucky even if they kill and steal; if they are taught to be beautiful, they will be harmless even if they kill their father and monarch. There's nothing worse than that. "
Idiom usage
As predicate, attribute and object, it is often used to reprimand.
Chinese PinYin : shāng jiào bài sú
offend public decency
attach oneself to persons in power. pān gāo jié guì
Dare not cross the thunder pool. bù gǎn yuè léi chí yī bù
too old to move about with ease. lǎo tiān bá dì
a woman who is unfaithful to her husband. bù ān yú shì
the corpses lie all over the countryside. shī héng biàn yě