it is no concern of yours
Gan Qing Di Shi, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is g ā NQ ī NGD ǐ sh ì, which means it's none of your business? It is often used to ridicule people's meddling. From "Qi'an Jun Zhong Bi ti".
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or a clause; often used to ridicule people's meddling. What does it have to do with you. examples poets like to meddle in their own affairs. The less important they are, the better they will be. The so-called "wrinkling a pool of spring water, the more important it is." (Volume 8 of Sui Yuan Shi Hua by Yuan Mei in Qing Dynasty)
Analysis of Idioms
Similar words: Gan Qing what's the matter? [rhyme words] there is no day for his death, a villain's ambition, three or four tunes, one lost classics, one's wisdom, thick green blocking out the sun, morning and evening, meeting each other without a day, auspicious day, rebellious and elegant
The origin of Idioms
1. Since the big Wu leaf in front of the drop terrace, why do you move and lament. In Du Mu's Qian Jun zhongbianti of Tang Dynasty, there is a saying in Yansi that "the wind rises suddenly and wrinkles a pool of spring water". Yuanzong tasted Yansi's opera and said, "what's the matter with you when you wrinkle a pool of spring water?" The book of the Southern Tang Dynasty Feng Yansi
Idiom story
During the Five Dynasties, Li Jing, the emperor of the Southern Tang Dynasty, was not interested in leading soldiers to fight and govern the government. He only liked to recite poems and lyrics. He wrote "breaking the sand of the Huanxi River": "the drizzle dreams of returning to the chicken fortress, and the small building blows through the cold of the jade Sheng." When he saw Prime Minister FENG Yansi's visit to the golden gate, he made fun of him for "wrinkling a pool of spring water. What's the matter with you?" Feng Yansi wittily said that he was not as good as him: "the small building blows through the cold of Yusheng.".
Chinese PinYin : gān qīng dǐ shì
it is no concern of yours
Close the door to raise a tiger. guān mén yǎng hǔ,hǔ dà shāng rén
ride a tiger and find it hard to get off. qí hǔ nán xià
attachment to the things and people related to a loved one. wū wū zhī ài