be dead to all feeling
Heartless, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Qu á NW ú x ī ng ā n, meaning no shame. It comes from the southern history, the reign of empress Chen.
Examples
Looking at his insistent smile, he seems to be a good one. (Yingning, strange tales from a lonely studio, by Pu Songling, Qing Dynasty)
usage
It means that there is no plan
[Tongyun CI] party evil favors traitors, seven return to elixir, one horse does not show double saddles, the country is peaceful and the people are safe, one person is in a corner, one is unhappy, turning the corner into safety, digging for heaven, being embarrassed, Zheng Weisang, Fuhai and moving mountains
Idiom story
Chen Shubao, the leader of empress Chen of the Southern Dynasty, was captured in Chang'an after the subjugation. Emperor Wen of the Sui Dynasty gave him preferential treatment and did not play the music of Wu in front of him, so as to prevent him from causing the pain of subjugation. Unexpectedly, later, the official who guarded empress Chen reported to Emperor Wen that empress Chen wanted an official name, and Emperor Wen said, "Shubao has no heart."
Chinese PinYin : quán wú xīn gān
be dead to all feeling
the tune lingered in the room. yú xiǎng rào liáng
an antidote against the disease. duì zhèng fā yào