the true mingled with the false
Virtual and real, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is x ū x ū sh í sh í, refers to the military strategy, good at confusing each other. It also refers to the combination of virtual writing and real writing in literary and artistic works, and the method of expression is thought-provoking. From the romance of the Three Kingdoms.
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: true or false antonym: honest and reliable
Idiom usage
How can this poem be a talented woman. The 90th chapter of Jing Hua Yuan by Li Ruzhen in Qing Dynasty
The origin of Idioms
The 49th chapter of romance of the Three Kingdoms by Luo Guanzhong in Ming Dynasty: "don't you hear the theory of" virtual reality "in the art of war? Although Cao can use troops, he can only be deceived. "
Chinese PinYin : xū xū shí shí
the true mingled with the false
have a guilty conscience , as one 's guilty conscience. zuò zéi xīn xū
the beam breaking and the rafter falling -- the country being in a stage of ruin. dòng shé cuī huài
like a man who was drunk or dreaming. rú chī rú mèng