Dodge the bad
As a Chinese idiom, the pronunciation is Z á op ī y ǐ D ù n, which means to live in seclusion. It's from Huainanzi, the folk precepts of Qi Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
"Huainanzi Qi folk precepts:" Yan He, Lu Jun want to phase but do not, so that people with money first Yan, chisel training and escape
Idiom usage
Example: jieji written by Yang Xiong of Han Dynasty: "the scholars either prospered by themselves or evaded the bad." Tang Yuanjie's "asking Jinshi": "who is going to run away, who is going to sweep the door all day?" The second chapter of Lao Can's Travels: "what's the difference between those who run away from evil and those who don't listen?"
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms: chisel for evidence, chisel for jade, chase after the exile and flee after hearing the wind
Chinese PinYin : záo pī yǐ dùn
Dodge the bad
summon up one 's courage for a task. chuō lì fēng fā
the man who rather trusted his measurements than placing any confidence in his own feet when buying shoes. zhèng rén mǎi lǚ
too seriously ill to be cured with medicine. bù kě jiù yào