The jade is destroyed in the forest
In yuzaiyang, the Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y ù Hu ǐ D ú zh ō ng, which means to refer to the heavy losses caused by the dereliction of duty of the person in charge. It comes from the Analects of Confucius by Lu konqiu in the spring and Autumn period.
The origin of Idioms
In the Analects of Confucius written by Lu kongqiu in the spring and Autumn period, it is said that "the tiger's cudgel comes from the cudgel, and the jade destroys the cudgel. Whose fault is it?"
Idiom usage
However, in the middle of the destruction of jade, the responsibility is hard to say, so it should be dismissed, what more to say? The ninth volume of miscellaneous notes by Li Dongyang in Ming Dynasty
The jade is destroyed in the forest
an old head on young shoulders - shǎo nián lǎo chéng
Bark beetles peck beams and columns - dù zhuó pōu liáng zhù