I'm afraid I can't help it
The Chinese idiom, Pinyin is k ǒ NGH ò UW ú P í ng, which means to be afraid that there will be no certificate in the future. It's a set of old contract documents. It comes from Wu Mingshi's "goods man Dan" in Yuan Dynasty.
Idiom usage
Let's sign a formal contract because we are afraid of nothing.
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: empty talk without foundation
The origin of Idioms
In Yuan Dynasty, the second discount of Wu Mingshi's "goods man Dan" is: "child chunlang, seven years old, has a little cinnabar on his chest. He is willing to sell and pick up thousands of households for his children. He is afraid of nothing. He sets up this document as a photo."
Idiom explanation
I'm afraid there won't be a certificate in the future. In the old days, the idioms of contract documents were often used together with "setting up a secondary license".
Chinese PinYin : kǒng hòu wú píng
I'm afraid I can't help it
when a rat runs across the street everybody cries , " kill it ! " -- a person hated by everyone. guò jiē lǎo shǔ
irrelevant disputes about affairs. xián shì xián fēi