have lost all interest in sth.
The Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y ì x ī ngsu ǒ R á n, is used to describe people who are not interested at all. It comes from the chronicles of the Eastern Zhou Dynasty.
Analysis of Idioms
I'm not interested
Idiom usage
In less than two hours, my mood had already faded and I regretted that I had done so much. Lu Xun's wandering in a restaurant
The origin of Idioms
Chapter 71 of the chronicles of the states in the Eastern Zhou Dynasty: "king is not in high spirits. He asked, "will you go back to the palace?" King Gong said, "you can move to the house of doctor Liang Qiu." Pu Songling's strange tales from a lonely studio Fairy Island in the Qing Dynasty: "Lu Yun Gu Fu said:" the sage who has no word is filial... " In a word, it is what people say. " When Wang heard of it, he was not very happy. "
Chinese PinYin : yì xīng suǒ rán
have lost all interest in sth.
take pleasure in giving favours. hào xíng xiǎo huì
fight both with open and secret means. míng zhēng àn dòu
show off in the presence of an expert. nòng fǔ bān mén