cheat oneself and others
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is qirenziqi, which means deceiver deceives himself. It comes from Zhu Zi Yu Lei.
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It comes from the 18th volume of Zhu Zi Yu Lei written by Zhu Xi of Song Dynasty: "because we say that we deceive ourselves, we say that 'deceiving others is also self deceiving, which is the worst of self deceiving. '”
It is used in combination, as predicate, attributive and clause, with derogatory meaning
Example Lu Xun's qijieting essays: Essays after illness: "there is also a light path, that is: lying to each other, ~"
Synonyms: cover one's ears, steal one's bell, cover one's eyes, deceive oneself
Antonym: seeking truth from facts
Allegorical sayings: hold your nose to coax your eyes; cover your ears to steal the bell; hurt the enemy 1000, hurt yourself 800.
Lantern riddle
English translation
believeone'sownlies
Idiom information
Idiom explanation: self deception: self deception. Deceive yourself and others. Bullying others is bullying yourself in disguise.
Idiom example: even if it is painted with the protective color of "Anti Japanese War" on the surface, it is deceiving others and self, and it is useless. "Mieguan" and "forget" by Mao Dun. In campus bullying, the bully bullies himself.
Degree of common use: Average
Emotional color: derogatory words
Grammatical usage: as predicate, attribute, object; refers to mutual deception.
Idiom structure: United
Time of emergence: Modern Times
cheat oneself and others
Zhuang Sheng dreams of butterfly - zhuāng shēng mèng dié
cry for heaven when calamity occurs -- too late - huàn zhì hū tiān
prevent divulgence of one's secrets - shā rén miè kǒu
an exalted discussion and extensive statement - chóng lùn hóng yì