Cause makes market
The pronunciation is y ī NYU á NW é ISH ì, which is a Chinese idiom. Its meaning used to refer to officials accepting bribes through unfair judgments. It comes from the biography of Tan Feng Yan, a scholar of the later Han Dynasty.
explain
To make money by writing.
allusion
[source] Ban Gu of the Eastern Han Dynasty wrote in the annals of criminal law of the Han Dynasty: "traitor officials are market-oriented because of their fate. If they want to live, they will be discussed by Fu Sheng. If they want to die, they will be compared with death."
[example] Fan Ye of the Southern Song Dynasty wrote in the book of the later Han Dynasty, biography of Huan, tan and Feng Yan: "one case is different in law, the same crime is different in theory, and the traitors have to make the market according to their reasons."
Analysis of Idioms
[usage] partial formal; predicate; derogatory
Cause makes market
attempt nothing and accomplish nothing - wú suǒ zuò wéi
be ready to realize one 's aspiration anywhere all over the country - sì fāng zhī zhì
desolate remote mountainous area - shēn shān qióng gǔ
a runaway horse gallops so fast that it leaves no trace - bēn yì jué chén