Hide the truth from the world
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is m á NTI ā nm è ID ì, which means to conceal the truth without conscience and cheat others with lies. From the moon on the river.
Notes on Idioms
To conceal or deceive.
The origin of Idioms
The poem of sprinkling the moon on the river by Hou Shanyuan, Jin, said: "if you don't know how to attack the heaven and the earth, you will know how to do it
Idiom usage
As a predicate or object; of deception.
Examples
The first discount of Ming Dynasty's Wu Mingshi's Nao Tong Tai: "I left Shanying that day and went to Tongcheng. I saw that Cangguan had broken the law of Hu Xingjing, which was unfair."
Hide the truth from the world
bring glory to one 's parents and become celebrated - xiǎn zǔ yáng míng
disasters pile up on one another - huò bù dān xíng