Explain with lies.

To: use; Chaos: Chaos. Pretend to be or mix real things with fake things. The origin of the idiom: Yan Family Instructions by Yan Zhitui in the Northern Qi Dynasty: "The rest are leap, which means false and confusing the true ears."

Examples of idioms: In this way, it is bound to confuse the audience and get more if you report less. ★ Qing Li Baichuan The Wizard of Oz Volume 4

Traditional Writing: Confusing Facts with Truth

Note: ㄧˇㄐㄧㄚˇㄌㄨㄢㄣ

A synonym for confusing people: specious, seemingly correct, but actually not so specious, hypocrisy is true. Han? Wang Chong, in general &; Chinese fish have pearls in their eyes. Metaphor is confusing the real with the fake. He said that you are a real fish and you should punish him for drinking for an hour. It's hard to tell the difference between true and false flowers and moon scars.

The antonym of the false and the true: a dog who paints a tiger sees that "painting a tiger is not against a dog". Carving mandarin fish is also called "carving mandarin fish into mandarin fish". Metaphor imitation is unrealistic, but it is similar. "The Biography of Ma Yuan in the Later Han Dynasty": "Although it is not enough for the younger generation, it is still a good policy.

Idiom grammar: as predicate, attribute and clause; Of fraud.

Degree of common use: common idioms

Emotion and color: neutral idioms

Idiom structure: more formal idioms

Generation time: ancient idioms

English translation: confuse the real with the fake

Pronunciation note: false, do not pronounce "jià".

Writing Note: Really, you can't write "positive".