embarrassed by undeserved praise
It's a Chinese idiom. Its pinyin is Ku ì B ù g ǎ nd ā ng, which refers to feeling ashamed and unable to bear the burden. It comes from the book of Liuliu village.
The origin of Idioms
In the book of Liuliu village written by Zheng Xie of Qing Dynasty, "the Taoist of ziqiongya, the king of Shenjun, presented a poem:" according to the music of the moon hall, you can go through the dishes and pour out the pearls of Jiaogong. " It's a shame, but it's also a good sentence. "
Analysis of Idioms
I can't bear it, I'm ashamed of it
Antonym is worthy of the name
Idiom usage
To be formal; to be predicate; to be derogatory
Examples
But I never dreamed of being praised by the two national leaders. It's really! Zhou Pijuan's a daughter living abroad
Chinese PinYin : kuì bù gǎn dāng
embarrassed by undeserved praise
leave one 's native place and live as a vagabond. lí xiāng bèi jǐng
have a squeeze hold on the enemy by slapping his back and strangling his throat. è hóu fǔ bèi