take bribes and bend the law
Corruption and bad law, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is t ā NZ ā nghu à if ǎ, meaning corruption and bribery, violating the law and discipline. It comes from the second fold of Chenzhou rice.
The origin of Idioms
The second discount of Yuan Dynasty anonymous's Chen Zhou Tan Mi: "who would think that those two Chenzhou people who came here were corrupt and illegal to drink."
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: corrupt and pervert the law
Idiom usage
It is used as predicate and attributive to describe people's greed.
Examples
In Huang Zongxi's Zi Liu Zi Xing Zheng of the Qing Dynasty, it is said that "if the emperor wants to ask, he will bully the emperor and ignore the emperor, and he can't refuse to pay the legal department."
Chinese PinYin : tān zāng huài fǎ
take bribes and bend the law
unnecessary and overelaborate formalities. fán wén rù jié
feel ashamed of one's inferiority. zì kuì bù rú
cause an exchange of partners by mistake between two couples engaged to marry. luàn diǎn yuān yāng
never to yield an inch of ground. cùn tǔ bù ràng
prove successful in every test. lǚ shì lǚ yàn