heart of disloyalty
Indomitable heart, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is B ù ch é nzh ī x ī n, which means the idea of not loyal to the king. Later also refers to the ambition to make trouble. It comes from the biography of Tao Sizhang, the second Gongsun in the history of the Three Kingdoms.
Analysis of Idioms
Antonym: loyalty
Idiom usage
After that, he became a prominent official and unified the army of Xizhou with 200000 troops, often with the intention of giving up. The third chapter of romance of the Three Kingdoms by Luo Guanzhong in Ming Dynasty
The origin of Idioms
According to the biography of Tao Sizhang, the second Gongsun in the history of the Three Kingdoms, it is said that "when Shu Yin was willing to surrender, it was not good for the country to have a long Lord, and it was rejected by justice." Zhou chuzhuan in the book of Jin: "I heard that Dun had the heart to give up, and I visited Heng to incise his teeth. Although Dun was against the plan, he did not dare to do anything wrong in his final visit. "
Chinese PinYin : bù chén zhī xīn
heart of disloyalty
evade the strong and attack the week. bì qiáng dǎ ruò
be delighted that things are better than one expected. dà xǐ guò wàng
lay more stress on the past than on the present. hòu gǔ bó jīn
utterly unscrupulous in its zeal to please its master. zhí gǒu fèi yáo