practise bribery or receive bribes publicly
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Hu ò L ù g ō NGX í ng, which means to bribe others with money or property for improper behavior. It comes from the annals of the Three Kingdoms, Wei Shu, Wu Di Ji.
Idiom usage
Subject predicate type; predicate, object; refers to the public bribery of goods and property. "Sui Shu liezhuan No.4": at that time, the government was gradually chaotic, the goods were bribed to the public, and when he was a privy official, he didn't ask about the high and low, and his family was full of treasures.
Analysis of Idioms
Bribery: bribery
The origin of Idioms
"Three Kingdoms · Wei Shu · Wudi Ji": three gongs pour evil, all hope to see the world. In business, the strong are resentful, but they don't play; the weak are always trapped.
practise bribery or receive bribes publicly
the words fail to convey the meaning - yán bù dá yì
Demolish the east wall and make up the west wall - chāi dōng qiáng bǔ xī qiáng
asking for some water and getting some wine - qǐ jiāng dé jiǔ