Dirty and dirty
Dirty, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Z ā NGW ū L á NGJ í, which means corruption, improper behavior and bad reputation. It comes from the annals of the Three Kingdoms, Wei Zhi and Wu Di Ji.
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym] dirty, bribery, illicit, infamous
The origin of Idioms
In the annals of the Three Kingdoms, Wei Zhi and Wu Di Ji, it is said that "many officials are attached to their relatives, and they are in a mess."
Idiom usage
A person's reputation, etc. Example: Yu Yingong, a scholar of Zhongshu, and his younger brother Gaomo, were in a mess. According to Bai Juyi's "defeated by the governor system of Yingong Yangzhou" and "Wei Shu. Vol. 89. Biography of cruel officials. Biography of Cui Xian", the scholar moved to Yanzhou in the early days, embezzled official tiles, and was in a mess. Li Ping, the second lieutenant of the imperial censor, corrected him and removed him. 」
Chinese PinYin : zāng wū láng jí
Dirty and dirty
be versed in both polite letters and martial arts. wén wǔ quán cái
correct evil doings and revert to good deeds. gǎi xíng qiān shàn
tell a story without missing a single circumstance. dī shuǐ bù lòu
generosity and severity complement each other. kuān měng bìng jì
Raise children for the old, save grain for hunger. yǎng ér dài lǎo,jī gǔ fáng jī