To pass on the wrong
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is é y ǐ Chu á n é, which means to spread the wrong things, the more they spread, the more wrong they get. It comes from "seven revisions · dialectics · changing concubines for horses".
The origin of Idioms
Lang Ying, Ming Dynasty, wrote in his seven revisions, dialectics, concubine changing horses: "otherwise, it's amazing to say that long beard and purple clothes are grotesque and obvious? Later generations did not study it and chanted it. It was a mistake to spread it. "
Idiom usage
As an object, attribute, rumor, etc. If they are not tried, they are afraid that stupid people will spread false information and use words to incite them. The 1911 Revolution · road protection movement
To pass on the wrong
be fraught with grim possibilities - xiōng duō jí shǎo