Wisdom in the teeth
Chi Ya Yu Hui, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is ch ǐ y á y ú Hu ì, which means to help people say good things. It comes from Su Zhongfen.
The idiom comes from Su Zhongfen, a record of night stories written by he banger in Qing Dynasty: "my husband conceals his evil deeds against Yang Shan, but now I have merits and virtues. I don't cherish my wisdom, but I must be ashamed of my simplicity."
Chinese PinYin : chǐ yá yú huì
Wisdom in the teeth
one flaw cannot obscure the splendor of the jade. xiá bù yǎn yú
A dead letter is a dead letter. sǐ biāo bái chán
It's better to save the cold than heavy fur. jiù hán mò rú chóng qiú