Treachery
Treachery, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is B è I ē NQ ì y ì, which means to betray the kindness of others to yourself. It comes from the theory of salt and iron.
The origin of Idioms
In Huan Kuan's on salt and iron, the Han Dynasty, it is said that "if you work with your own body, the people still betray their kindness and go into exile."
Idiom usage
It refers to not remembering kindness. On the contrary, if we throw away the revolutionary tradition and betray the people, we will be cursed by the people. Guan Hua's reply to "Stormy Night"
Analysis of Idioms
Antonym: be ungrateful or ungrateful
Chinese PinYin : bèi ēn qì yì
Treachery
never to slacken morning or night. sù yè fěi jiě
exhibit virtue and expose vice. zhāng shàn dàn è
splits off as it meets the edge of knife without effort. yìng rèn ér jiě
Blind people feel the elephant. zhòng máng mō xiàng