have no compassion for others
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is B ù Gu ā NT 庲 ngy ǎ ng, which means to refer to suffering or urgent things, to refer to things that are closely related, and to refer to things that have nothing to do with one's own interests. From Zhu Zi Yu Lei.
Analysis of Idioms
They are closely related to each other and depend on each other
The origin of Idioms
Zhu Xi's Zhu Zi Yu Lei (volume 101) of the Song Dynasty: "it doesn't matter. It's not benevolent."
Idiom usage
It is a metaphor for not caring about things that have nothing to do with oneself. Although there are two or three old women here, they are all from. Seeing that Li Ma has gone, they all quietly went to find their own convenience. (Chapter 8 of a dream of Red Mansions by Cao Xueqin in the Qing Dynasty) Chapter 40 of the biography of children's Heroes: "if there is a fork in the road, it doesn't matter to others. The right way is" there is no way to be an official, but there is a good way to eat. " Chen Tianhua of the Qing Dynasty wrote a warning bell: "even though several people have written several books, they are all indifferent words. There is not a single word about the foundation of foreign countries and the reasons for their prosperity." Act one of Cao Yu's Thunderstorm: "it seems very fashionable for ordinary young people to talk with workers and say two or three words of indifference and sympathy."
Chinese PinYin : bù guān tòng yǎng
have no compassion for others
restrain the powerful and help the weak. yì qiáng fú ruò
be sentimentally attached to homeland. gù tǔ nán lí
The neighbor peeps at the wall. lín nǚ kuī qiáng
Take advantage of the opportunity to attack. fù chéng zhì kòu