distort fact
In Chinese vocabulary, Pinyin is Ni ǔ Q ū Zu ò zh í, which means to compare the reversal of right and wrong. It comes from tie Guai Li by Yue Bochuan of Yuan Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
The first discount of Yue Bochuan's "tie Guai Li" in Yuan Dynasty: "brother, your brother has never turned a corner on weekdays, so he won't go away
Analysis of Idioms
Antonym: reversing right and wrong
Idiom usage
You don't have to turn things upside down.
distort fact
with the head of a buck and the eyes of a rat - zhāng tóu shǔ mù
time slips away fast and the year is approaching its end - jí yǐng diāo nián