Dirty and dirty
The Chinese idiom "Z ā NGW ū L á NGJ í" in pinyin means corruption, bribery, misconduct and bad reputation. It comes from the story of Duke Liu in the book of travel in Huguang and other places.
Idioms and allusions
In Yuan Huang's "Huguang and other places in the book, the story of the provincial Pingzhang, the tablet of the God of Liu Gong", it is said that "the eight members of the Party of wood should be the general manager of Daozhou Road, and they should defeat the government and harm the people, and get dirty."
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms: illicit, bribery and goods
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attributive; used in writing.
Dirty and dirty
use the great banner as a tiger-skin - lā dà qí zuò hǔ pí
It's like hearing a voice and seeing a person - rú wéi qí shēng,rú jiàn qí rén