harbor evil intentions
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is x ī NSH ù B ù zh è ng, which means that people are unfaithful and honest. From the romance of the Three Kingdoms. In Zhu Zi's ruling maxim, it is said that "if you want to be seen, it is not true and good." Show that like to pretend good and then behind the bad.
The origin of Idioms
The 19th chapter of romance of the Three Kingdoms by Luo Guanzhong of Ming Dynasty: "Gong RI:" your mind is not right, so I abandon you! "
Idiom usage
Examples
The 84th chapter of a dream of Red Mansions by Cao Xueqin in Qing Dynasty: "when did you hide again, you can see that you are also a man with an evil mind."
harbor evil intentions
strengthening the body resistance to eliminate pathogenic factors - fú zhèng qū xié
unable to suffer the humiliation made by the warder even if he is a whittled phoney one - xuē mù wéi lì
worse off than some, better off than many - bǐ shàng bù zú,bǐ xià yǒu yú
there are ministers in the home of a statesman - xiàng mén yǒu xiàng
Equal courtesy and equal respect - děng lǐ xiāng kàng