No brother and no wife
The Chinese idiom, w ú Xi à NGD à OS à o, means slander out of thin air. It comes from the biography of zhibuyi in the history of Han Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
The language version of the book of Han, zhibujue Zhuan, says, "if a man is destroyed, he will say," no doubt he is very beautiful, but he is good at stealing his sister-in-law! "I have no brother," he said. But in the end, it's not self-evident. 」
Idiom usage
Used as an object or attribute; used in writing. [example] in the past, there was no doubt that there was no elder brother, and the world called him the thief's sister-in-law This is all white for black, bullying the heaven. 劐 劐 劐 劐 劐 劐 劐 劐 劐 劐 劐 劐 劐
Idiom story
During the Han Dynasty, there was a beautiful man named zhibuyi, who was slandered for having an affair with his sister-in-law. Straight no doubt heard these rumors, just said: "I have no brother." I didn't defend myself. Therefore, he spread the allusion of having no brother and stealing his sister-in-law to ridicule the rumors that black and white are reversed.
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: something out of nothing
Chinese PinYin : wú xiōng dào sǎo
No brother and no wife
sweep down irresistibly from a commanding height. gāo wū jiàn líng
there is a chill in the spring air. chūn hán liào qiào
keep preceding promise in mind. jiǔ yāo bù wàng