stubborn
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is g ù zh í J ǐ Ji à n, which means stubbornly sticking to one's own opinions and refusing to change them. From the biography of Chen MI in the history of Song Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
In the biography of Chen MI in the history of the Song Dynasty, it is said that "stubbornness of one's own opinions makes people lose heart."
Idiom usage
The verb object type is used as predicate and attributive with derogatory meaning. Listening to his father's disapproval, Feng Guitang thought, "as soon as you get older, you will be stubborn and conservative." (Liang Bin's "red flag spectrum" 8) Mao Dun's "Midnight" 9: "if Sun Fu must be stubborn, he will be pulled down." In the biography of Li Gang in the old book of the Tang Dynasty, it is said that "when Zuo pushe and Yang Su and Su Wei were in power, they were obstinately different from each other in what they saw, so they hated each other deeply."
Chinese PinYin : gù zhí jǐ jiàn
stubborn
turn over the sea and river. jiǎo hǎi fān jiāng
strip off one 's upper garment and make an apology. ròu tǎn qiān yáng
Break the mirror and divide the child. pò jìng fēn chāi