stop at nothing
There is no fear. The phonetic notation is w ú Su ǒ w è ij ì.
Idiom explanation
No fear
[Pinyin]: W ú Su ǒ w è ij ì
[explanation]: there are no fears and scruples.
Idioms and allusions
[source]: in the book of Han · biography of Wang Zun written by Ban Gu of Han Dynasty, it is said that "dictatorship is good at power, great power and good fortune, no control in vertical posture, and no fear of harm at home."
[idiom story] during the period of emperor yuan of Han Dynasty, the audience of Zhongshu ordered Shi Xian to be dictatorial, domineering, unruly and fearless. All officials were afraid of him. Even Kuang Heng, prime minister, and Zhang Tan, the censor, flattered him. After emperor Cheng of the Han Dynasty ascended the throne, Jiang Shixian became a servant of the central government. Wang Zuncai, the commander of Sili school, dared to write a letter to attack Kuang Heng and others. He did not dare to uphold justice.
Discrimination of words
Bold, fearless and scrupulous
Antonym: timid and forward-looking
Usage: used as predicate and attributive; refers to people who are bold and reckless
Chinese PinYin : wú suǒ wèi jì
stop at nothing
abuse the law and practise favouritism. xùn qíng wǎng fǎ
Life and death, honor and Disgrace. sǐ shēng róng rǔ
be concerned about one 's country and one 's people. yōu guó yōu mín
increase revenue and reduce expenditure. zēng shōu jié zhī
an orphan-calf injures the nursing cow -- ingratitude. gū dú chù rǔ