Put aside one's sleeves to save money
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is B à IXI à Qu è J à n, which means people are honest and don't accept bribes. It's from Shun Zong Shi Lu.
The origin of Idioms
According to shun Zong Shi Lu written by Han Yu of the Tang Dynasty, "Zhiyi is a scholar of the Imperial Academy. He is a scholar of the Imperial Academy, and he is a scholar of the Imperial Academy. Xia Qing should not be Xia Qingxiu, who is in the middle of the golden age Swing the sleeve and lead the body away. "
Idiom usage
It refers to refusing bribes.
Put aside one's sleeves to save money
save people from the abyss of suffering - jiù mín yú shuǐ huǒ
round and round the firewood is bound - chóu móu shù xīn
the paper is too short to describe one 's deep feeling - qíng cháng zhǐ duǎn