fabricate rumours to mislead people
Li ú y á nhuॸzhॸng, a Chinese idiom, means to create rumors to deceive and confuse the masses. From the biography of Zhai Fangjin in the history of Han Dynasty
Analysis of Idioms
Rumor: groundless words. Bewitching: 1. Bewitching. 2. Confused people.
The origin of Idioms
According to the biography of Zhai Fangjin in the book of Han Dynasty, "today, Zhai Yi, Liu Xin and others are plotting against and rebellious, and they are trying to usurp the throne
Idiom usage
It refers to making rumors to confuse the masses. I'm sorry, but I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry. The 44th chapter of the history of the Five Dynasties by Cai Dongfan
fabricate rumours to mislead people
have won fame both at home and abroad - chí míng zhōng wài
discard the old ways of life in favour of the new - gé gù dǐng xīn
from abundance back to limitation - yóu bó fǎn yuē
to work hard and live plainly and frugally - gōng kǔ shí jiǎn
shelter evil people and countenance evil practices - cáng gòu nà wū