be utterly devoid of conscience
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is s à NGJ à NTI à NLI á ng, which means that there is no conscience at all. It describes the extreme evil. From Lu Yuan Cong Hua, conjecture and egoism.
Idiom explanation
Bereavement: loss; good nature: conscience.
The origin of Idioms
According to Qian Yong's Lu Yuan Cong Hua · Yi Lun · egoism in Qing Dynasty, "today's people are rich, proud and extravagant, but they are also heartless."
Analysis of Idioms
The synonym is insane and inhuman; the antonym is benevolent and merciful
Idiom usage
The verb object type is used as predicate and attributive with derogatory meaning. Today's government wants to kill them, so they go to my house to hide for a few days. (Ouyang Shan's sanjiaxiang 26)
Chinese PinYin : sàng jìn tiān liáng
be utterly devoid of conscience
the king and his ministers united all efforts for a common purpose. yuán míng biē yìng
can 't tell how many there are -- numerous similar cases. bù zhī fán jǐ
claim credit for oneself and become arrogant. jū gōng zì ào
simile of the luxury and waste. dǐng chēng yù shí