refuse to realize one 's error
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is zh í m í B ù f ǎ n, which means still clinging to the wrong side, the same as "clinging to the wrong side". It comes from the book of the Liang Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Yao Silian of the Tang Dynasty wrote in the book of the emperor of the Yuan Dynasty: "if you are stubborn and refuse to disobey the king's division, when the army comes, the punishment will not be pardoned."
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate, attribute, or object. If you ask for a gift, you should ask Shunyi to do it for you. If you are stubborn, you should leave it alone. A reply to Wu Huanzhou, governor of Xuanda, by Zhang Juzheng in Ming Dynasty
Chinese PinYin : zhí mí bù fǎn
refuse to realize one 's error
sit idle and enjoy the fruits of others ' work. zuò xiǎng qí chéng
Draw the egg and carve the salary. huà luǎn diāo xīn