Fair and just
Fair and just, idiom, refers to the bright. It comes from the 22nd chapter of Xingshi Yinyuan Zhuan written by Xi Zhousheng in the Qing Dynasty: "you are not afraid of fuming people's panic! If you are a fair man, you are not a big man! What people can't do, you can do it! And sell people's wives? Can't you sell the tree on the grave and sell your wife? "
The origin of Idioms
The 22nd chapter of Xingshi Yinyuan Zhuan written by Xi Zhousheng in Qing Dynasty: "you are not afraid of people who smoke! If you are a fair man, you are not a big man! What people can't do, you can do it! And sell people's wives? Can't you sell the tree on the grave and sell your wife? "
usage
Generally used to describe people.
Fair and just
a scoundrel hates persons of integrity - dào zēng zhǔ rén
A burning wife and a burning child - huǒ qī huī zǐ
as far apart as heaven and earth - tiān rǎng zhī gé
see little of the world and hear little of what is going on outside - guǎ jiàn xiǎn wén
success and failure , gain and loss - chéng bài dé shī
which it would be awkward to disclose - nán yán zhī yǐn
put a round peg in a square hole - fāng ruì yuán záo
make no distinction between what 's one 's own and what 's another 's - bù fēn bǐ cǐ