Prime minister in white
Prime minister in white, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is B á iy ī Z ǎ IXI à ng, which means the person in the prime minister's family who is nameless and powerful. It comes from the biography of Linghu in the new book of Tang Dynasty.
Idiom usage
Linghu is the prime minister and his son is the prime minister in white. Lang Ying, Ming Dynasty
The origin of Idioms
In the biography of Linghu Yao in the new book of the Tang Dynasty, it is said that "the prime minister in white" lived at that time. "It's not worth mentioning that there is no solution in the world because of the fact that there is no solution in the world."
Prime minister in white
Hunger is easy to eat, thirst is easy to drink - jī zhě yì wéi shí,kě zhě yì wéi yǐn
Holding ice in winter and holding fire in summer - dōng hán bào bīng,xià rè wò huǒ
to hold back from taking action against an evildoer for fear of involving good people - tóu shǔ jì qì