refuse to realize one's error
In Chinese idioms, the Pinyin is zh í m í B ù w ù. It means that we can't distinguish things clearly, insist on the wrong idea and don't wake up. It comes from the book of the Liang Dynasty, Emperor Wu Ji by Yao Silian of the Tang Dynasty.
Analysis of Idioms
Persistence: obstinacy, persistence; obsession: confusion; enlightenment: consciousness. Insist on making mistakes without realizing them. Antonym is a combination of awakening from a dream, knowing how to return from a lost road, prodigal son turning back and reining in a precipice
The origin of Idioms
Yao Silian of Tang Dynasty wrote in the book of Emperor Wu of Liang Dynasty: "if you do not understand, you are far away from the rebellious King's division, and when the army comes, you will be punished. The so-called fiery plateau, and Zhilan will die together."
Idiom usage
Correct mistakes in time and don't be stubborn. Yuan · Wu Mingshi's Mulan huaman: in his poor years, he was stubborn, and his voice and color were illusory, so he stayed. Yuan old fairyland road domain, close to heaven and earth far away. Lin Mengchu, Ming Dynasty, volume 2-4 of "the surprise of making a case at the first moment": "if you are stubborn, you can't come back because you are dead in stone." In the first and third chapters of a dream of Red Mansions by Cao Xueqin in the Qing Dynasty: "the original purpose of my master and wife is to ask you to become an adult to continue the legacy of your ancestors. You're just stubborn. What should you do Yao xueyin's Li Zicheng Volume 1 Chapter 9: Tell Tian Jianxiu and the thieves to come and surrender. Don't be stubborn and go to the end of the road!
Chinese PinYin : zhí mí bù wù
refuse to realize one's error
Call in the morning and call in the evening. zhāo zòu mù zhào
The tiger scratched its head. lǎo hǔ tóu shàng sāo yǎng