sell one 's master and sue for honours
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is m à izh à Qi ú R ó ng, which means to sell the owner's interests in exchange for personal prosperity. It's from the story of the old man.
The origin of Idioms
The 59th chapter of Xia Jingqu's "exposed words of the old man in the wild" in the Qing Dynasty: "if you gain power, you will gather like flies and mosquitoes; if you lose power, you will scatter like birds and beasts, and even there are quite a lot of people who sell for glory."
Idiom usage
It has a derogatory meaning. I think Mr. Huang is a teacher in vain! What kind of teacher is he? The 60th chapter of romance of the Three Kingdoms by Luo Guanzhong of Ming Dynasty, Zhang Yongnian's rebellion against Yang Xiu and Pang Shiyuan's discussion on taking western Shu: a man who is not a seller for glory, but now meets Minggong, dare not not lose his heart. In the 67th chapter of the romance of the Three Kingdoms by Luo Guanzhong in the Ming Dynasty, Cao Cao calms down zhangliao in the middle of the Han Dynasty, and Zhang Liao's power is free and unfettered: only Yang Song sells himself for glory, that is to say, he is ordered to kill Cao Cao in the city. Wen Jingbang's "the rising star in the smoke" I think Mr. Huang is a teacher in vain! What kind of teacher should he be?
Chinese PinYin : mài zhǔ qiú róng
sell one 's master and sue for honours