unrewardable merit
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is g ō NGG ā ob ù sh ǎ ng, which means great credit, can not be rewarded, describes the great credit. From the biography of Chen Qing in the book of Liang.
Idiom explanation
Merit: meritorious service. Reward: reward.
The origin of Idioms
Biography of Chen Qingzhi in the book of Liang: if you don't get a high reward, you will be in danger. If you have two things, will the general not worry?
Idiom usage
It refers to great credit. Preface to Yu Feng's works by Zhu YIZUN in Qing Dynasty.
Chinese PinYin : gōng gāo bù shǎng
unrewardable merit
When the wall falls, everyone pushes. qiáng dǎo zhòng rén tuī
Forget to eat and forget to sleep. wàng cān fèi qǐn
To support the way out of danger. fú diān chí wēi
sleep in the same bed but dream different dreams. tóng chuáng yì mèng