an impressive and deep talk
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is zh ū x ī nzh ī L ù n, which means to identify a crime only according to its intention without asking about the crime; it also refers to the comment of exposing the motive. It comes from the biography of Huo Chen in the later Han Dynasty.
Idiom explanation
Explanation: punishment.
The origin of Idioms
Huo Chen's biography in the book of the later Han Dynasty: "the meaning of the spring and Autumn Annals was decided by the original situation, and it was meant to forgive and punish people. Therefore, although Xu Zhi killed his king, he did not commit a crime. Zhao Dun saw the book as a thief."
Analysis of Idioms
The law of killing the heart
Idiom usage
To be formal; to be an object; to refer to criticism and profound comments that expose the motives of others. You know, at that time, although he only said that he didn't bring the scissors, he just wanted to use his hands instead of scissors. This "tear" word is ~, how not to cut! The 90th chapter of Jing Hua Yuan by Li Ruzhen in Qing Dynasty
Idiom story
In the spring and Autumn period, Zhao Chuan of Jin State killed the king of Jin linggong. Zhao Dun, as the prime minister, didn't denounce Zhao Chuan. According to this, the historian of Jin State wrote "Zhao Dun killed his monarch" when recording this event. Later, people think that this theory must be "the theory of killing the heart". Later, it also refers to the deep discussion
Chinese PinYin : zhū xīn zhī lùn
an impressive and deep talk
Food for the West and sleep for the East. xī shí dōng mián
Carved heart and Eagle Claw. diāo xīn yīng zhǎo
People die for money, birds die for food. rén wèi cái sǐ,niǎo wèi shí wáng
hear the news and rise up in response. wàng fēng xiǎng yīng