well established and irrefutable
Indeed, the Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Qu è Qi è B ù y í, which means to describe the true and reliable, can not be doubted. It's from officialdom.
The origin of Idioms
Chapter 42 of Li Baojia's officialdom in the Qing Dynasty: "I still remember these two sentences in the book of Songs:" I sent my uncle to Weiyang. ". Today, this allusion can be said to be true. "
Idiom usage
Example: Chapter 78 of Wu Jianren's twenty years of witnessing the strange situation in the Qing Dynasty: "naturally, the textual criticism of that Western dish is inexorable."
well established and irrefutable
bring peace and stability to the country - ān bāng dìng guó
turn pale at the mention of a tiger - tán hǔ sè biàn
There are no ancients before, and no comers after - qián bù jiàn gǔ rén,hòu bù jiàn lái zhě