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Idioms in early Ming dynasty
Idioms in the early Ming dynasty: knowingly commit crimes, observe words and observe colors, and fight with open fire.

1、

Ming Ming knows not to do, but deliberately violated.

[Interpretation]: You know you can't do it, but you deliberately violate it.

[Source]: "Continued Record of Light"-"The teacher said:' Knowing and Doing Crime'."

[Synonym]: Law enforcement, arson by state officials, knowing the law and breaking the law.

[antonym]: Once you know it, you have to change it.

[Example]: Some things we know are bad, but we knowingly commit them.

2、

See through autumn [míng cháqi Hao]

[Interpretation]: The original shape makes people have a keen eye, and any small thing can be seen clearly. The latter describes people's insight into things.

[Source]: "Literature and art gather together"-"From Zhu Zhiming"; Look at late autumn. "

【 Synonym 】: Seeing fire from the cave, knowing ourselves and ourselves, SHEN WOO, a wise man, is a traitor from the cave and a traitor from the cave, with sharp eyes.

[antonym]: short-sighted, confused, superficial and ignorant.

[Example]: Bao Gong, who is observant in Kaifeng Prefecture, never wronged a good man and never spared a bad man.

3、

Fight with an open flame

[Interpretation]: Light a torch and hold a weapon. Describe public robbery or unscrupulous doing bad things.

[Source]: Shi Ming Naian's "Water Margin"-"Today, I saw him holding every fire; I don't know his number ... "

[Synonym]: blatant, blatant, unscrupulous, unscrupulous, looting.

[antonym]: aboveboard, furtive.

[Example]: Japanese devils have no sense of shame. They will fight with open fire and openly rob the people of their money.