do all kinds of evil
Many evils, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Zu è Du ō Du ā n, means to do a lot of bad things, refers to the crime. From journey to the West.
Idiom explanation
Do evil: do evil.
The origin of Idioms
The forty second chapter of journey to the West written by Wu Chengen of Ming Dynasty: "if you think that you committed many evils at the beginning, you will be able to accumulate these three or four days of fasting."
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym]: do all evil and do all good
Idiom usage
It's a bad person. In Zaiyuan and other places, he always believed that he was a minister who took care of his life. Even if he committed many evils, he would invite leniency. The 27th chapter of Shi Yukun's three evils and five righteousness: the day after Bao Gong finished the case, it is clear that Hou Ge Dengyun, the great hero, had committed many evils and asked the emperor to put him to death; Nie Gannu, on the other hand, said: "the old forces who committed many evils and harmed the people are the ones who have exhausted their power." Chapter 13: he is very self-conscious. Father and son commit many evils. God and man are angry together.
Chinese PinYin : zuò è duō duān
do all kinds of evil
set an example by personally taking part. shēn tǐ lì xíng
put on one 's armour and take up armshuang. huàn jiǎ zhí bīng
whenever and wherever possible. suí shí suí dì
old acquaintances and new customers received alike by the shopmen. shēng zhāng shú wèi