be destructive to the morals
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y ǒ ush ā NGF ē nghu à, which means to corrupt and damage social customs and education. It refers to words and deeds that have bad influence on social customs and education. It comes from Peidu huandai written by Guan Hanqing of Yuan Dynasty.
Idiom explanation
Injury: hinder and corrupt; weathering: civilize customs. Corrupt and damage social customs and education. It refers to words and deeds that have bad influence on social customs and education.
The origin of Idioms
The fourth fold of Peidu huandai written by Guan Hanqing in Yuan Dynasty: "if you do something immoral, you will get married."
Idiom usage
Wang Weiqiu's the complete legend of five relations, which is devoid of literary genre. (section 14 of Ming Liang Ji by Yang Yi of Ming Dynasty)
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: corrupt antonym: behave
Chinese PinYin : yǒu shāng fēng huà
be destructive to the morals
Jiang Taigong fishing, willing to take the bait. jiāng tài gōng diào yú,yuàn zhě shàng gōu
impervious to desires and passions. gǔ jǐng wú bō