offend public decency
The Chinese idiom, sh à ngji à ob à is ú in pinyin, means to corrupt education and customs. From the words of sin.
The origin of Idioms
Ma Zhongxi's "sin Yan" in Ming Dynasty: "today's Taoists are simple and unreasonable. If they are buried in a good place, they will be lucky even if they kill and steal; if they are taught to be beautiful, they will be harmless even if they kill their father and monarch. There's nothing worse than that. "
Idiom usage
As predicate, attribute and object, it is often used to reprimand.
offend public decency