heinous crime
Heinous crime, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is t ā OTI ā nzu ì x í ng, which means heinous crime. It's a metaphor for great evil. It comes from Su Shi of Song Dynasty that LV Huiqing is responsible for granting Jianning army's deputy envoys the official duty of not signing a letter for local resettlement.
The origin of Idioms
Su Shi of Song Dynasty wrote "Lv Huiqing's duty to appoint Jianning army's deputy envoys not to sign official documents for resettlement in this prefecture": "it's the rule of the world to correct the heinous crimes."
Idiom usage
After the September 18th Incident, the Japanese aggressors committed heinous crimes against the Chinese people.
Analysis of Idioms
A great crime
heinous crime
understand thoroughly the truth of all things on earth and handle affairs successfully accordingly - kāi wù chéng wù
each trying to cheat or outwit the other - ěr yú wǒ zhà
hate evil as one does one 's enemy - jí è ruò chóu
not of imposing stature but strong and capable - duǎn xiǎo jīng hàn