Poems and books
Shi Shu FA Zhong is a Chinese idiom, and the Pinyin is sh ī sh ū f à zh ǒ ng, which refers to the hypocrite style of duplicity of words and deeds. It comes from Chuang Tzu's foreign things written by Chuang Tzu in the Warring States period, Song Dynasty and Zhou Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Chuang Tzu's foreign things: "the Confucians sent their tombs with poems."
Idiom usage
It refers to the style of a hypocrite
Examples
It's not just a collection of poems and books, but the usurpation of Zhouguan. Preface to strange tales of Liaozhai by Gao Heng in Qing Dynasty
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: the tomb of poetry ceremony
Chinese PinYin : shī shū fà zhǒng
Poems and books
Take up the flag and take up the umbrella. shōu qí juàn sǎn
a beauty is dressed in mourning white. hóng zhuāng sù guǒ
The high and the low are changeable. guì jiàn wú cháng
send armed forces to suppress. míng gǔ ér gōng