being put in the grease , it does not get glossy -- incorruptible official
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is "Zhi Gao Mo run", which means that officials should be honest and self-defense, and they should not change the Qing style. It comes from the stele of Zhao Fen in Sui Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
"Jinshi cuibian zhaofen stele of Sui Dynasty" says: "pure self-defense, fat plaster Mo run."
Analysis of Idioms
Fat but not moist
Idiom usage
He is honest and clean
Chinese PinYin : zhī gāo mò rùn
being put in the grease , it does not get glossy -- incorruptible official
the vicissitudes of official life. huàn hǎi fú chén
A stiff peach is a substitute for a plum. jiāng táo dài lǐ
be destructive to the morals. yǒu shāng fēng huà
live on the land and eat what it produces. shí máo jiàn tǔ