not to yield a step
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is C ùùùùùùùàà ng, which means not to give an inch to others. It describes not to give in and compromise at all. It comes from "ten virtues are opposite to each other.".
The origin of Idioms
Liang Qichao of Qing Dynasty wrote "the political foundation of the western countries lies in the civil rights, and the consolidation of civil rights is due to the national competition for rights, which means that everyone does not pull out a single heart to benefit the world."
Idiom usage
He is not willing to give in at all.
Examples
Chapter 16 of Wang Chaowen's treatise on Sister Feng: "in the internal struggle of the landlord class, Xiren tends to compromise, but Sister Feng does not give up."
Chinese PinYin : cùn bù bù ràng
not to yield a step
vulgar ideas reappear in one 's mind. bǐ lìn fù méng
birds ' twitter and fragrance of flowers. niǎo yǔ huā xiāng
Donate one's body to disaster. juān qū fù nàn