conclusive evidence
Authentic evidence, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is zh ē NP í ngsh í J ù, meaning conclusive evidence. From the ghost of the black book.
The origin of Idioms
In the fifth chapter of the ghost of the Black family written by Peng Yangou in the Qing Dynasty, "I was a well-off citizen. People say that I demote opium privately. It's just a criticism. There's no real evidence."
Idiom usage
It is a combination of subject, object and attribute with commendatory meaning. The 150th chapter of Wu Jianren's "strange situation witnessed in 20 years" in Qing Dynasty: "this prescription is covered with his name book; it's a real evidence." Chapter 15 of officialdom: there is no real evidence for the group of people behind. When they see the appearance in front of them, they are already cold
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms are obvious to all, evidence-based, irrefutable evidence, faithfulness and sign; antonyms are absurd, absurd, shadowy
conclusive evidence
The army is strong and the general is brave - bīng qiáng àng yǒng
be unable to sit down or sleep at ease - zuò wò bù ān
would cut clean through iron as though it were mud - xuē tiě rú ní