be ungrateful to kindness
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is B è iy à w à ng à n, which means to abandon morality and forget kindness. It comes from Xie Jinwu, a nameless writer in Yuan Dynasty.
Idiom usage
The man Dynasty was civil and military, and the officials were rich and well paid That one is not the favor of the imperial court, but now they are greedy of life and fear of death, ungrateful and fighting to surrender.
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: ungrateful, ungrateful and forsaken; antonym: grateful
The origin of Idioms
The third fold of Yuan anonymous's Xie Jinwu: "I don't want him to be ungrateful, let alone to do it."
Idiom explanation
It means betraying morality and forgetting kindness. The same as "ingratitude".
Chinese PinYin : bèi yù wàng ēn
be ungrateful to kindness
Sever one's kindness with righteousness. yǐ yì gē ēn
covetousness of corrupted officials. fēng shǐ cháng shé
excelling and deep ---- to be transcendent without trace. chāo chāo xuán zhù