be standing jokes
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is chuanweixiaotan, which means to spread to become people's laughing material. It's from Strange Tales of a lonely studio, childe Jiaping.
A joke: a joke; a joke. Spread to become people's laughing material. [source]: in Pu Songling's strange tales from a lonely studio · master Jiaping of the Qing Dynasty: "although the master was ashamed, he still didn't know what he was talking about, so he folded a post to show his servant. It's a joke. " [example]: let's just laugh. Zhao Shuli's Xiao erhei's marriage
be standing jokes
live in the wilds and dwell in caves - xué jū yě chǔ
have neither fault to find with nor praise to bestow - wú jiù wú yù