allow oneself to be insulted to remain alive
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is R ě ng ò ut ō ush ē ng, which means to endure humiliation and survive. From the romance of the Three Kingdoms.
The origin of Idioms
In the romance of the Three Kingdoms by Luo Guanzhong of Ming Dynasty, it is said that "if I hate it, I will die, but I have no secret with the general, so I have to live in disgrace."
Idiom usage
It refers to living in a muddle.
Examples
I don't want to live in this way.
Chen Zi'ang of the Tang Dynasty wrote in the form of thanking his father for Zhang's works: "therefore, we have to live with unkindness and self encouragement, and hope to be effective in case of failure. We have to make up for our mistakes and pay for our kindness, lose our bodies and bones, and make a willing wish."
Chinese PinYin : rěn gòu tōu shēng
allow oneself to be insulted to remain alive
This is tolerable, which is intolerable. cǐ ér kě rěn ,shú bù kě rěn
The army is strong and the general is brave. bīng qiáng àng yǒng
as easy as burning hair and crushing dry weeds. liǎo fà cuī kū