come clean
To tell the whole story, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Qu á NP á NTU ō ch ū, which means that even the plate is brought out. All the metaphors are told without reservation. It comes from the 16th volume of monk Guanglu in Tianmu Zhongfeng in Yuan and Ming Dynasties.
The origin of Idioms
Volume 16 of the book Tianmu Zhongfeng monk Guanglu written in Yuan and Ming Dynasties: "today, I'm here to draw a model for you and tell you the truth."
Idiom usage
When the foreigners saw that they were a little willing, they took Wuhu Road as an example. The 44th chapter of Li Baojia's "a brief history of civilization" in the Qing Dynasty and the second volume of Feng Menglong's "a general warning to the world" in the Ming Dynasty: "after dinner, Tian's five thousand words in Zhuangzi's" Nanhua Sutra "and" Laozi's morality "are presented to Wang and sun."
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms: to tell the truth, to say everything, to be outspoken, to speak freely; Antonyms: to be vague, to be evasive, to be secretive, to hide the truth
come clean
No matter what you do, you don't get much wisdom - bù jīng yī shì,bù zhǎng yī zhì
a neat desk before a bright window - míng chuāng jìng jī
kill the chicken to frighten the monkey - shā jī xià hóu