Corrupt officials
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is Z é iz à Lu à NCH é n, which means people who have different intentions and commit crimes. It comes from the biography of Xu Shanxin in the book of Sui Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Wei Zhengshou's Sui Shu Xu Shanxin Zhuan in the Tang Dynasty said: "although the evil of the country is taboo, the king must write, so the bandits and disorderly officials, the world is afraid, and the tortoise and mirror of the Yuan Dynasty can be clearly observed."
Idiom usage
Used as an object or attribute; used in writing.
Examples
Loyal and righteous officials are all trapped in the net, while corrupt and disorderly officials are placed on the temple corridor. The 73rd chapter of the complete biography of Shuoyue by Qian Cai in Qing Dynasty
"Mencius · Teng Wengong Xia": "Confucius became the" spring and Autumn Annals ", and all the disorderly officials and thieves."
If there are thieves who don't punish, then you can't bury them in books, and the new king can't ascend to the throne in books. Therefore, the law is very strict to guard against disorderly officials and thieves. The book to shikefa by Aixinjueluo Dorgon in Qing Dynasty
Idiom story
In the spring and Autumn period, the state power of Lu was controlled by the three families of Jisun, mengsun and shusun. Duke Ding of Lu became a puppet. He heard that Confucius advocated "the principle of monarch and Minister", and summoned Confucius to say that he hated Jisun and other disorderly officials and thieves most. Confucius analyzed the internal and external troubles of Lu state, suggested that he should contact Qi State externally, revitalize the monarchy internally, and formulated a series of measures.
Chinese PinYin : zéi zǐ luàn chén
Corrupt officials
range upon range of mountains. chóng luán dié zhàng
wrinkled skin and white hair -- advanced in age. jī pí hè fà
leave nothing usable to the invading enemy. kōng shì qīng yě