take oneself
In Chinese, Pinyin is y ǐ NJI ù Z ì Z é, which means to take the responsibility for mistakes and make self-criticism. From the biography of Yu Liang in the book of Jin.
The origin of Idioms
In the biography of Yu Liang in the book of Jin: "Liang is very afraid, and when he sees Kan, he blames himself, and the wind stops."
Idiom usage
"Emperor Wu of Gaozu in the period of the northern history of Zhou Dynasty" means "Gongqing takes the blame." Ji Yun of the Qing Dynasty wrote in notes of Yuewei thatched cottage - continuation of luanyang I: "repeatedly opening up, blaming oneself, tears stained clothes, people's hearts moved, and several wails."
Analysis of Idioms
Antonym: asking for a crime
Chinese PinYin : yǐn jiù zì zé
take oneself
drift about without any definite trace like running water or duckweed. làng jì fú zōng
The upper mausoleum is replaced by the lower. shàng líng xià tì
mountains are high , torrents swift. shān gāo shuǐ xiǎn