remain impenitent
It is a Chinese idiom. Pinyin is R ě n è B ù Qu ā n, which means to do evil for a long time without repentance. It comes from "yehuo Bian Li Bu Yi Chang and ER pin Zheng Qing".
The origin of Idioms
Song Lian of the Ming Dynasty wrote in the inscription on the Shinto of Hu Gong: "if you can go against it, you will be forgiven for it; if you can't bear evil, you will have no time to regret when the city is broken."
Idiom usage
In addition, it can be used as predicate and attributive. All of them were well-known for a long time, but they did not use up all their resources, and those who did not have the ability to bear evil like Wang had been in power for a long time. In Ming Dynasty, Shen De Fu's Ye Huo Bian Li Bu Yi Jiu and ER pin Zheng Qing and Ming Wu Ming Shi's Ming Feng Ji. The third and ninth chapter: "when I visited Jiangxi, I found that Yan Song's father and son were good at both evil and evil, and occupied the land of the villagers. "The ninth chapter of the romance of the gods:" King Zhou was born of evil but not evil. He had a vicious nature. He knocked on the bone and cut off the fetus and took the child's kidney. 」
Chinese PinYin : rěn è bù quān
remain impenitent
proclaim one 's might first and then make an actual demonstration of it. xiān shēng hòu shí
one 's hair is grayishly white at the temples. liǎng bìn rú shuāng
said of a loyal counsellor who gives admonition to the emperor in person. miàn zhé tíng zhēng
softness can overcome the hardest. róu néng kè gāng