Yingfeifeifeijin
Yingfeijin, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y í ngy í NGF ē ij ǐ n, which means slander people, confuse black and white, slander and frame people, and commit crimes. It comes from Shi Xiaoya Qingfei.
Idiom usage
It's hard to be loyal to the flying flies. It's hard to be loyal to the flying flies.
The origin of Idioms
In Shi · Xiaoya · green flies: "to Camp Green flies ends in fan. It's not a gentleman who has no faith in slander. " Another poem, Xiaoya Xiangbo: "Qi Xi, Fei Xi, Cheng is Bei Jin. The number of people who are in trouble is very large. "
Idiom explanation
It is a metaphor for slanderer to confuse black and white, slander and frame up, and incriminate people.
Yingfeifeifeijin
get into trouble through clever means - nòng qiǎo fǎn zhuō
prolonged illness makes the patient be a doctor - jiǔ bìng chéng yī
Take the world as one's duty - yǐ tiān xià wéi jǐ rèn
cut the bones between the joints and make use of the momentum to decompose the boneless parts - pī xì dǎo yín
Five applications and three orders - wǔ shēn sān lìng