upright and outspoken
The Chinese idiom, Pinyin is g ā ngzh è NGB ù. It means strong and upright, no flattery, no favoritism. It's from the story of allusions.
Notes on Idioms
A: catering, favoritism.
The origin of Idioms
Yu jideng of the Ming Dynasty, Volume 14 of the records of allusions, said: "those who are not honest and upright, and those who are not able to pay private homage, will be regarded as immoral."
Idiom usage
It refers to being strong and upright, not flattering. In Pu an Xiu's heart of a child, he said, "his integrity always affects my heart." 2. Mr. Bao is impartial and upright in handling cases. (3) Pu Songling's Liaozhaizhiyi Yiguan in the Qing Dynasty: "Jinan Tongzhi Duke Wu is upright."
Idiom story
Bao Zheng of Song Dynasty was a upright and upright official. When he was appointed as magistrate of Tianchang County in Yangzhou, he wrote a poem to encourage himself: "pure heart is the root cause, straight way is the body plan." In his whole life, he dared to make a direct admonition against Yan, did not seek selfish interests, adhered to the law like a mountain, was selfless, did not fear the powerful, did not follow private feelings, and eliminated harm for the people, becoming the "Bao Qingtian" in the hearts of the people. upright people: Bao Zheng, you Zhende, Guan Yu, Hai Rui, di Renjie.
Chinese PinYin : gāng zhèng bù ē
upright and outspoken
Beat the chicken and curse the dog. dǎ jī mà gǒu
cover up the eyes and ears of others. zhē yǎn ěr mù
Retrace and hold your breath. chóng jì bǐng qì
hands and eyes acting in coordination. shǒu huī mù sòng
brilliant purples and reds ; gaily dressed maidens. yān hóng chà zǐ