Hide one's wits
Hiding one's intelligence is a Chinese idiom, pronounced t ā OJ ì y ǐ nzh ì, which means hiding one's intelligence. It comes from Tao Guang, a new theory.
Idioms and allusions
[source] in the new treatise on Tao Guang written by Liu Zhou of the Northern Qi Dynasty, it is said that "those who have virtue in ancient times should keep their secret and keep their secret."
Discrimination of words
[pinyin code]: tjyz [synonym]: hide one's light and vanish one's trace [usage]: used as predicate and attribute; used in dealing with affairs
Hide one's wits
Repaying a grievance with a straight line - yǐ zhí bào yuàn
have whatever one 's heart desires - cóng xīn suǒ yù
be contented in poverty and devoted to things spiritual - ān pín lè dào
a compound of connecting courtyards , each surrounded by dwelling quarters - shēn zhái dà yuàn