Parables distort facts and confuse right and wrong. What is the idiom

Updated on society 2024-03-17
5 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-06

    There is no distinction between black and white, and right and wrong are reversed.

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    The metaphor deliberately reverses right and wrong, and the idioms that confuse black and white are:

    1. Referring to the deer as a horse: referring to the story of the Qin Dynasty eunuch Zhao Gao telling the deer about the horse, which is a metaphor for reversing right and wrong.

    3. Twist right and wrong: insist on saying what is right and what is wrong. Describe right and wrong upside down, and make sense of words.

    4. Prove that the turtle is a turtle: say that the turtle is a soft-shelled turtle. The parable is deliberately distorted and reversed.

    5. East and West are easy to face: only the east and west directions are reversed. The latter metaphor is reversed, and the audio-visual obscuration is like confusion.

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-04

    Idiom: Refers to a deer as a horse.

    Pinyin: zhǐ lù wéi mǎ简Pin: zlwm

    Explanation: Point to the deer and say it's a horse. The metaphor deliberately reverses black and white to confuse right and wrong.

    synonyms: confusing right and wrong, reversing black and white.

    Usage: conjunctive form; as a predicate, object, and definite; Derogatory source: Western Han Dynasty Sima Qian's "Historical Records: Qin Shi Huang Benji": "The second laughed and said: 'The prime minister is wrong? It is said that the deer is the horse. ’”

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-03

    Reversing black and white, deep text twists and turns, deep text weekly, proving that the turtle becomes a turtle, bending the law for personal gain, and pointing to the deer as a horse.

    1. The upside-down black and white version [ diān dǎ权o hēi bái ] says that the black is white and the white is black. Parables distort facts and confuse right and wrong.

    2. 深文zigza[shēn wén qǔ shé] 深文: The formulation or invocation of legal provisions is strict and severe; It refers to the distorted invocation of the letter of the law to convict a person without a trace.

    3. Shenwen Zhou Nei [ shēn wén zhōu nà ] distorts or harshly invokes the provisions of the law to convict people.

    4. 設turtle成鳖 [zhèng guī chéng biē] speaks of turtles as soft-shelled turtles. The parable is deliberately distorted and reversed.

    5. 徇私交法 [xùn sī wǎng fǎ] accommodating private feelings and violating the law and discipline.

    6. Refers to the deer as a horse [zhǐ lù wéi mǎ] refers to the deer and says that it is a horse. The metaphor deliberately reverses black and white to confuse right and wrong.

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-02

    White and black upside down Upside down: confusion. It refers to the indistinguishability between white and black, and the reversal of right and wrong.

    Source: Western Han Dynasty Liu Xiang "The Biography of the Daughters of Chu Cheng Zheng Zhen": "The king did not know the investigation, so he was innocent, it was white and black upside down, and the top and bottom were wrong. ”

    East-West Noodles refers to the reversal of the east-west direction. The post-metaphor is reversed, and the hearing and hearing are confused.

    Source: Han Jiayi's "New Book: Review": "Things are suitable for chaos, such as the confusion of the terrain, the opportunity is gradually going, Russia and things are easy to face, and people don't know it." Therefore, Mozi cried when he saw Qu Lu, and he was sad and sorrowful. ”

    Pumice Stone Sinking Wood is a metaphor for right and wrong reversed.

    Source: Han Lu Jia's "New Language: Discernment": "The reputation of the husband and the public, the pumice stone sinks into the wood, the evil is suppressed, and the straight is the song." ”

    Distorting to straighten is a metaphor for right and wrong being reversed.

    Source: The first fold of Yuan Yue Bochuan's "Iron Kidnapping Li": "Brother, your brother has never been twisted and straightened on weekdays, so he doesn't go or run away." ”

    Twist Straight composes a metaphor for right and wrong.

    Reversal of right and wrong Yes: True; Non: False. Say what is wrong is right and what is right is wrong. Turning right and wrong upside down.

    Source: Tang Hanyu's "Epitaph of Mr. Shi": "The words of the ancient sages are dense and subtle, and the notes are numerous, and right and wrong are reversed. ”

    The wings of the cicada are heavy, and the wings of the cicada are regarded as heavy, and the weight of 30,000 catties is regarded as light. The metaphor refers to the reversal of right and wrong, and the confusion of truth and falsehood.

    Source: "Chu Ci Buju": "The cicada wings are heavy, and Qianjun is light; The yellow bell was destroyed, and the golden cauldron thundered. ”

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