have no sense of shame
It's a Chinese idiom. Its pinyin is Gu ǎ Li á nxi ǎ NCH ǐ, which used to refer to dishonesty and shamelessness, but now refers to shamelessness. From Yu Ba Shu Xi.
Notes on Idioms
Few, fresh: few.
The origin of Idioms
In Yu Ba Shu Xi, Sima Xiangru of the Han Dynasty said, "the father and brother's teaching is not first, the children's rate is not sincere, they are incorruptible and shameless, and the vulgarity is not long and thick."
Idiom usage
It is used as predicate, object and attribute. example only for their own greedy, shameless. (the seventh chapter of Zui Xing Shi by Lu Gu kuansheng in the east of Ming Dynasty)
Chinese PinYin : guǎ lián xiǎn chǐ
have no sense of shame
incomplete parts of ancient scripts. cán biān liè jiǎn
one's eyes brimming with radiating vigour. jiǒng jiǒng yǒu shén