Shi huizengmei
Shi huizengmei, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is sh ì Hu í Z ē NGM ě I, which means to remove the evil and increase the good. It comes from the book of rites.
The origin of Idioms
The book of rites · ritual vessels: "ritual, interpretation, increase the quality of beauty." Zheng Xuan's note: "Shi, you go; Hui, you ward off evil; Zhi, you still have nature."
Idiom usage
Zhang Binglin's "Dai Yi Ran Bu Lun" said: "although Donghu was in power, he still could not be in disorder. But he got rid of the slavery system of Jiangzuo and made it more beautiful. That's why Sinian is outstanding."
Shi huizengmei
important people have short memories - guì rén shàn wàng
Fish and water enjoy each other - yú shuǐ xiāng huān
reflect on oneself three times a day - sān xǐng wú shēn
struggle and gesticulate savagely - sā jiāo sā chī
produce clouds with one turn of the hand and rain with another - fù yǔ fān yún
walk on hoar-frost and later on solid ice - lǚ shuāng jiān bīng