make no exception
The Chinese idiom, y ī sh ì t ó NgR é n in pinyin, originally means that saints treat people the same way and show benevolence. After more that the same view of people, regardless of thick and thin. From the original man.
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms are fair, equal and equal; antonyms are different and more important
Idiom usage
The police are not afraid of bicycles, even more foreign cars and tricycles. They are not happy with foreign cars and tricycles. If they don't like them, they will come together. Zhu Ziqing's back Miscellany
The origin of Idioms
Han Yu, Tang Dynasty, wrote in the original man: "so the sages treat each other equally, and they are close but far away."
Chinese PinYin : yī shì tóng rén
make no exception
A good teacher makes a good student. míng shī chū gāo tú
I don't know how to turn it upside down. bù zhī diān dǎo
the widower , the widow , the orphan and the childless. guān guǎ gū dú
dogs and chickens made of potter 's clay. táo quǎn wǎ jī
wait for the right price to sell. dài jiǎ ér gū