Slander with profound words
It's a Chinese idiom. Pinyin is sh ē NW é nqi ǎ OD ǐ, which means to be accused of deliberate slander. It comes from the biography of Ji Zheng in historical records.
The origin of Idioms
In the biography of Ji Zheng in historical records, it is said that "the officials with swords and brushes are good at slandering people with profound and skillful writing, which makes people guilty."
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate, attribute, or adverbial; used in writing
Examples
For your reference Therefore, it is ridiculous to take a word for word to sell one's own words! Xu Wei, Ming Dynasty
Slander with profound words
as easy as blowing away the dust - chuī huī zhī lì
one 's sense of honour makes it impossible to refuse - yì bù róng cí