Treacherous and insidious
It is a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is t ī Ji ā NF ā f ú, which means to expose the secret traitors and bad things. It comes from the biography of Ren Su Du and Zheng Cang in the annals of the Three Kingdoms.
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attributive; used in writing
Examples
Sun yuan rules know Hangzhou, treacherous, known as the gods.
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: pick up the traitor and send it to Fu
The origin of Idioms
"From Taizu to Xianxi, Chen Guowu, the prefect of Wei County, Ren Yu, the prefect of Qinghe County, Yan Fei, the prefect of Jingzhao County, Linghu Shao, the prefect of Hongnong County, and Kong Yi, the Minister of Lu state, the prefect of Jinan County, were either pitiful, sincere and benevolent, innocent or treacherous
Idiom explanation
Expose the secret traitors and bad things.
Treacherous and insidious
rubbing the shoulder and following the steps - jiān mó zhǒng jiē
share together danger and safety - ān wēi yǔ gòng
so skillfully imitated as to be indistinguishable from the real - wéi xiāo wéi miào
words are the voice of the mind - yán wéi xīn shēng