fail to keep faith
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y á n é RW ú x ì n, which means that words do not count and there is no credit. It comes from the biography of Gu Liang, the 22nd year of Fu Gong.
Analysis of Idioms
Antonym: one word, one promise, one promise, one promise
The origin of Idioms
In the 22nd year of the Duke of Fu in the biography of Gu Liang: "the reason why speech is a speaker is that he believes in it; why is speech a word if he does not believe it?"
Idiom usage
Contraction; predicate and attribute; derogatory. Liu Shaotang said in his Pu Liu Jia Ren that he was willing to marry us Guan Hanqing of the Yuan Dynasty wrote in the first fold of the tune of the wind and the moon: "there is treasure in the eyes of humanity, you can stop talking without believing." "warning of the world". Volume 23. Le Xiaoshe
Chinese PinYin : yán ér wú xìn
fail to keep faith
public opinions are divergent. zhòng shuō fēn yún
To suspend troops according to the law. àn jiǎ xiū bīng
time slips away fast and the year is approaching its end. jí yǐng diāo nián