Why are you dancing?

Misinterpret the law with lexical fraud

Interpretation of dance brush and ink: dance play: intentional play; Wenmo: Writing style. Play with words on purpose. The original intention is to cheat by citing legal provisions. Later it often refers to playing with word skills.

The origin of the idiom: "Biography of Sui Shu Wang Chong": "Learn the law clearly, but dance it with pen and ink to win its heart." ; (Ming) Luo Guanzhong's Romance of the Three Kingdoms 43: "Is it also effective for scholars, just between the pen and the inkstone, counting black and yellow, dancing and writing?" ; (Tang) Liu Zhiji's "Poem Tongqu Pen": "It has dance words and essays, but it is not literary. If it is destroyed with the rest, it will be humiliated. "

Example of idiom: The people on the tablet insist on dancing and writing ink, and the more they jump, the more confused they get.

Synonym of dancing and writing ink: dancing and writing ink.

The antonym of dancing and writing: illiterate, with little or no education; Especially those that cannot be read or written; An illiterate old man.

Idiom grammar: combination; As predicate, object and attribute; With a derogatory connotation.

Degree of common use: common idioms; Emotional color: derogatory idiom.

Idiom structure: joint idioms; Generation time: ancient idiom.

Pronunciation note: long, can not be read as "note writing note: dance, don't write" noon "

Example of idiom: The people on the tablet insist on dancing and writing ink, and the more they jump, the more confused they get. (Lu Xun's Gai Hua Collection: Xiamen Communication).