It's better to cheat than to cheat
As a Chinese idiom, the phonetic alphabet is "zhe Ji à Nb à J í". From the seventh chapter of outlaws of the marsh.
The origin of Idioms
The seventh chapter of the water margin by Shi Naian of Ming Dynasty: "when I came down from the five mountains building, I met a treacherous man. I stopped her and refused to let her go." And the fifty second time: "that fellow brought many deceitful and treacherous people into his house, and when he came to the house, he would send us out, and he would come to stay."
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attributive; used in writing.
Chinese PinYin : zhà jiān bù jí
It's better to cheat than to cheat
mutually decline to take dates and pears -- show brotherly love. ràng zǎo tuī lí