To disguise and steal money
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is sh ù Zhu ā NGD à OJ ī n, which means no doubt. It comes from the biography of zhibuyi in the history of Han Dynasty.
Idiom story
During the Han Dynasty, Lang Guanjun no doubt served Emperor Wen of Han Dynasty. His colleagues asked for leave to go home and mistakenly took the money from another dormitory home. The colleague thought that Jun had taken it. You don't doubt that if you know you can't distinguish, you will give your gold to the person who has lost it. Later, the man who took the gold by mistake came back and gave it back to the digger, who was very ashamed.
The origin of Idioms
In the book of Han, zhibuyizhuan, it is said that "when he went back to the same house, he mistakenly held the same house as Lang Jin. With the same Shelang, I have no doubt about my death. I have no doubt that Xie Youzhi will pay for it. Later, those who came back were called "elders" because they came back to Jin and were ashamed of their death. "
Idiom usage
Used as an object or attribute; used in writing.
Examples
It's hard to distinguish sincerity from suspicion. It's not enough to talk about moving and stealing axes, or packing and stealing gold. Tinggao by Yan Yanzhi in the Southern Song Dynasty
Chinese PinYin : shù zhuāng dào jīn
To disguise and steal money
a promotion not according to precedence. bù cì zhī qiān
the dragon had nine sons and each of them was different from the others—brothers born of the same parents differ from each other. lóng shēng jiǔ zǐ