Strange and treacherous
It's a Chinese idiom. Pinyin is Hu ī Gu ǐ Ju é Gu à I, which means strange and strange. It comes from the history of the Song Dynasty, Huizong Jisan.
The origin of Idioms
It comes from Zhuangzi's Qi Wu Lun, "so it is Jufu and Ying, Li and Xishi, Huigui and Qiqi, and daotong is one.". Later generations quoted many, such as: the history of the Song Dynasty Huizong Jisan: "the imperial edict to the world's supervisors, sheriffs to search and visit the scholars of yangu, although it is very strange and mysterious, it is well-known."
Idiom usage
As a predicate or attribute; of something peculiar. Qian Qianyi's book of Qu Youzhong's poems in Qing Dynasty: all the strange things in heaven and earth, the interaction between life experiences, and the myriad forms are all used as the forms, and then called poetry. Chuang Tzu's Qi Wu Lun: "therefore, it's Jufu and Ying, Li and Xi Shi, which are very strange and mysterious, and the way is one."
Strange and treacherous
veteran soldiers and able captains - jīng bīng qiáng jiàng
eradicate harmful things and set up the business benefit of the people - chú hài xīng lì
A virtuous man seldom has dreams. - zhì rén wú mèng
with forms independent from one another and the whole structure remaining integrated - shì hé xíng lí