The devil is the devil
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is sh é nqi ā NGU ǐ zh ì, which means being restrained in many ways and unable to act arbitrarily. It's from "leisure and occasional mail, CI and Qu, melody".
Idiom explanation
It refers to being restrained from doing anything at will.
The origin of Idioms
Li Yu of the Qing Dynasty wrote in his book "leisure, occasional mail, CI, Qu, temperament" that "when writers and artists see a kind of legend, they should change their mind and eyes, and do not set up a code of punishment. They should know that this kind of writing is pitiful and difficult to write If it's not poetry and prose, let it be proud of writing quickly, and not be restrained by the gods. "
Chinese PinYin : shén qiān guǐ zhì
The devil is the devil
take away by force or trickery. qiǎo tōu háo duó
there is poetry in a painting. huà zhōng yǒu shī
a very valuable and rare thing. lián chéng zhī bì
The jade is broken and the fragrance is gone. yù suì xiāng xiāo
a thousand deaths will not atone for one 's crime. zuì bù róng zhū