Right and wrong
Right and wrong, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y á NSH ì R é NF ē I, meaning that speech is beyond reproach, but behavior is not desirable. It comes from Ming Li Zhi's Shi Gang Ping Yao song Ji Tai Zu.
Idiom usage
As predicate and attributive, it means that speech is beyond reproach, but conduct is not desirable.
The origin of Idioms
In Li Zhi's Shi Gang Ping Yao · song Ji · Taizu of Ming Dynasty, "Xu Xuan and Zhang Wei talk about right and wrong."
Chinese PinYin : yán shì rén fēi
Right and wrong
stamp one 's feet and beat one 's chest in bitterness. diē jiǎo chuí xiōng
The cicada's wings are heavy, and the weight is light. chán yì wéi zhòng,qiān jūn wéi qīng
the path was covered with grass and thorns. jīng jí zài tú
The jade is destroyed in the forest. yù huǐ dú zhōng
have full assurance of success. wén cāo shèng quàn