be still unpunished
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Xi à oy á OSH à w à I, which means to stay out of the business and not care. It comes from the book to Yao Zhongcheng in Guangdong Province.
The origin of Idioms
Bao Shichen in Qing Dynasty wrote a letter to Yao Zhongcheng in Guangdong Province: "the first disaster is the culprit, and you are free." Lu Xun's lacy Literature: women don't lie much: "about Yang Fei, after Lushan Rebellion, all the literati told big lies. Xuanzong was free, but she was responsible for many bad things."
Idiom usage
Examples
…… However, theorists and critics are both responsible for guiding, commenting and consulting. We can't just blame them for not explaining clearly. Lu Xun's qijieting essays on the adoption of old forms
Chinese PinYin : xiāo yáo shì wài
be still unpunished
imbued with a spirit that can conquer mountains and rivers. qì tūn shān hé
Broken willows and broken flowers. liǔ zhé huā cán
swift as the wind and quick as lightning. diàn chè xīng chí