doubly guilty
In Chinese, the Pinyin is Zu ì Ji ā y ī D ě ng, which means to impose heavier punishment on criminals. From the ghost of the black book.
The origin of Idioms
The fifth chapter of Peng Yangou's the evil spirit of the black book in Qing Dynasty: "it's against the law for you to eat cigarettes. Let's take you and eat your cigarettes instead. I know it. It's even more serious."
Idiom usage
It refers to aggravating punishment. When a banner man is a traitor, the crime is more serious. Lao She's the first act of Teahouse
Analysis of Idioms
The crime is more than the crime
Chinese PinYin : zuì jiā yī děng
doubly guilty
Fish in the pond and birds in the cage. chí yú lóng niǎo
remove the stains and cleanse the filth. dí xiá dàng gòu
supported by irrefutable evidence. záo záo yǒu jù
infer the whole matter after hearing but one point. wén yī zhī èr
watch out furtively to the east and west. dōng qiáo xī wàng