appropriate sth. borrowed for the own use
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Ji ǔ Ji ǎ B ù Gu ī, false: borrow. It originally means to borrow the name of benevolence and righteousness without real implementation, but later means to borrow it for a long time without returning it. It's from "Mencius with all his heart".
Analysis of Idioms
If you don't come back after the time limit, you'll never come back
The origin of Idioms
"Mencius: on the heart:" long vacation and do not return, evil know it is not also
Idiom usage
It is used as predicate, object and attribute. It has a derogatory meaning and means to borrow for a long time but not to return. Xieshan's collection of Jiting was intended to imitate this, but after Xieshan died, his manuscripts were borrowed by Hang Shijun, and most of the later compilers and engravers failed to follow the original one. (Xie Guozhen's "Pingjing sun Shi Ji · textual research" and "Er Ke Pai An Qi. Vol. 20": "those who are honest and upright in business don't want to keep private, but they just take advantage of their own interests, do it autonomously and with their own image. They are yours and mine, and they will never return after a long time. 」
Chinese PinYin : jiǔ jiǎ bù guī
appropriate sth. borrowed for the own use
settle a given question on a single authority. dìng yú yī zūn
Draw the needle and pick up the mustard. yǐn zhēn shí jiè
How can you let others snore beside your bed. wò tà zhī páng,qǐ róng tā rén hān shuì
till my heart is weary , and my head aches. gān xīn shǒu jí