Invective
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is m à NC í Hu á Shu à, which means lying. It comes from the biography of Gou Jian's ministers in the spring and Autumn period of Wu and Yue.
The origin of Idioms
Zhao Ye, Han Dynasty, wrote in the spring and Autumn Annals of Wu and Yue, the biography of Gou Jian's accession to the throne: "today's monarch kingdom is in Kuaiji, poor in Wu, sad in words and bitter in words What is the reason for a monarch to abuse his words and use them to deceive each other? He is sincere and does not take them. "
Idiom usage
As an object or attribute; of a lie
Invective
marriage according to all the traditional rules - sān méi liù zhèng
My head is burning and my forehead is rotten - tóu jiāo é làn
freely flowing style of writing - xíng yún liú shuǐ