open one 's heart to a person
The Chinese idiom, Pinyin is p ī L ì g ā ng é, which means to mean to see each other sincerely and to talk from the heart. It also describes being very loyal, which is the same as "Pigan Lidan". It comes from the third state of Chen rang, the Deputy envoy of the Privy Council.
The origin of Idioms
Fan Zhongyan of the Song Dynasty wrote the third petition of the Deputy envoys of the Privy Council calling for Chen rang in the que: "the old ministers were full of bitterness, and they often wrote about it, and begged to be in office, so that they could be exhausted."
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym]: liver and gall, liver and gall
Idiom usage
He is very loyal.
Chinese PinYin : pī lì gān gé
open one 's heart to a person
referring to the great fright of routed soldiers. fēng shēng hè lì
in western dress and leather shoes. xī zhuāng gé lǚ
take across sentient beings universally. pǔ jì zhòng shēng
till the seas dry up and the rocks decay. hǎi kū shí làn