make good omissions and deficiencies
It is a Chinese idiom. Pinyin is sh í y í B ǔ Qu ē, which means to correct other people's shortcomings and faults, and to record the deeds of Yi. It comes from Sima Qian's letter to Ren Shaoqing in Han Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Sima Qian's "letter to Ren Shaoqing" in the Western Han Dynasty: "the first one can't accept loyalty, efficiency and trust, has the reputation of wonderful strategy and ability, and can't make up for the lack, and can't recruit talents."
Idiom usage
In the general meaning of literature and history written by Zhang Xuecheng in Qing Dynasty, it is said that "when you first get rough, you can hide words, and when you discuss complicated and simple things, you have to scratch your head."
Chinese PinYin : shí yí bǔ quē
make good omissions and deficiencies
ever remembered in the annals of history. yǒng chuí qīng shǐ
The wind comes from behind the ears. ěr hòu shēng fēng
a dragon 's head and a snake 's tail. lóng tóu shé wěi