A shy face
Shy face is a Chinese idiom. Pinyin is mi ǎ NY á NR é NSH ì, which means to describe a person who is disheartened and lives in the world with thick skin. It comes from the biography of Xi Jian in the book of Jin.
Idiom explanation
Shy face: show a face of shame. It describes being disheartened and shameless and living in the world.
The origin of Idioms
"The book of Jin, biography of Xi Jian:" how can you live in seclusion, be shy and evil
Idiom usage
"Liaozhaizhiyi Lianxiang" says: "if there is a doctor who can make my concubine live up to my husband, I will bury my head in the ground and dare to be shy again."
Idiom story
In order to restrain Wang Dun, Emperor Jin Yuan appointed Xi Jian as general of Anxi, guarding Hefei and commanding the army of Jiangxi and Yangzhou. Wang Dun recommended him as the minister's order. On his way back to Beijing, Xi Jian paid a visit to Wang Dun, and both sides expressed their views on man Wuqiu's decisive loyalty to empress Jia. Xi Jian thinks that he can't live secretly when he is in danger. He has the cheek to live in the world.
Chinese PinYin : tiǎn yán rén shì
A shy face
a man who loses position and influence may be subjected to much indignity. hǔ luò píng chuān
No matter how solid the root is, it will hurt. zài shí zhī gēn bì shāng
the dazzling human world with its myriad temptations. huā jǐn shì jiè