To slander with eloquence
Wuwenqiao slander, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is w ǔ w é nqi ǎ OD ǐ, which means to play with words, slander and trap. It comes from the biography of Zhang Tang in the history of Han Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
"Zhang tangzhuan in the book of Han Dynasty:" the rule is a great man, and he must be skillful in writing and slander. "
Idiom usage
As a predicate or object; used in dealing with affairs. In Su Shi's "on six matters of accumulated debt and four matters discussed by the procuratorial committee in response to the imperial edict, there is a state of action in which" the officials are mean, different from the saints, skillfully slander, and should not be let go. "
To slander with eloquence
lower one 's banners and muffle one 's drums - yǎn qí xī gǔ
Break the nest and finish the egg - pò cháo wán luǎn
Keep the army for thousands of days - yǎng jūn qiān rì,yòng zài yī zhāo
spring returns to the good earth - chūn huí dà dì