mean and having no sense of shame
Despicable, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is B ē IB ǐ w ú ch ǐ, describes the poor quality, regardless of shame. It's from officialdom.
The origin of Idioms
The 35th chapter of Li Baojia's officialdom in the Qing Dynasty: "run a brave camp, you are despicable! "Go down and wait."
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym] extremely obscene, brazen, despicable and vulgar; [antonym] dignified, dignified and highly respected
Idiom usage
Combined; used as predicate or attribute; used of individuals or groups of poor quality. example this is what happens in the world: the more selfish and selfish people are, the more powerful and overbearing they are. Chapter 27 of Mao Dun's frost leaves are as red as February flowers and officialdom's appearance: "after arriving in Beijing, he once again indulged in extravagance and extravagance, and colluded with the Philistine Huang Mou to go to camp everywhere, which is despicable and shameless." Chapter 32 of Li Baojia's the appearance of officialdom in the Qing Dynasty: however, Yu Hongchen decided not to agree. He must go back to the manufacturing station to remove his envoy and take him as a member. He thought that he was despicable and skillful in training. this is what happens in the world: the more shameless and selfish people are, the more powerful and overbearing they are. Some snobbish people are mean and shameless. They are used to making waves and quarreling.
Chinese PinYin : bēi bǐ wú chǐ
mean and having no sense of shame
sell offices and barter ranks. fàn guān yù jué
swallow anything and everything. jiān shōu bìng chù
cultivate morality through acting decidedly. guǒ xíng yù dé