concentrate on
Holding one's breath, pronounced B ǐ ngsh ē ngli ǎ nx ī, is a Chinese idiom used to describe silence. It's from the book of expressing congratulations and changing the previous chapter to thank for mistakes.
Idiom explanation
It's quiet.
Idioms and allusions
[source] "the Analects of Confucius, the village Party:" take photos and go up to the hall, bow as well as hold your breath. " Cai Yong of Han Dynasty wrote that "Chen Yong was scared, held his breath and didn't know where to throw himself." [example] contemporary writer Yin Qian's collection of essays "the age of Banghe": "people's indifference and numbness to the alienation and degeneration of being brave for a just cause often make me confused and surprised. In particular, when we look at the heroic deeds of being brave for a just cause, we are just like a lazy cat dancing with rats. In the face of heroes, apart from clapping and cheering, we keep shameful silence and completely lose our due sincere attitude and personal position. For more than half a century, what we have seen is this kind of low browed, reserved, echoed or cold eyed onlooker. Nowadays, some people even regard doing good deeds and doing good deeds as "done by fools and stupid people" and "learning from Lei Feng" as a laughing stock. In many places and in many people's eyes, "Lei Feng" is equated with "fool" Isn't that painful? "
Chinese PinYin : píng shēng liǎn xī
concentrate on
For the sake of public affairs. yīn gōng jiǎ sī
be attacked by the enemy from without and within. biǎo lǐ shòu dí
mend the fold after the sheep have been stolen. wáng yáng bǔ láo