ashamed of one's inferiority
The Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Z ì Ku ì f ú R ú, which means that you feel ashamed because you are inferior to others. It comes from Shao Jiuniang.
The origin of Idioms
In Liao Zhai Zhi Yi Shao Jiu Niang written by Pu Songling in Qing Dynasty, it is said that "a wife is also virtuous, but she is ashamed of herself and becomes jealous."
Idiom usage
It is used as predicate and object. In that place, the saints were very prolific and became a privileged class that made both Sakyamuni and sugradai feel ashamed. (Lu Xun, "two of the Jesse's essays, Confucius in modern China"), 2, in order to see the other 8 yuan shop, I went to another house to buy a bottle of vegetable oil essence. The result of hair is not only a gray feature, but also a combination of hair and hair, which makes some special mousse feel ashamed. 3. In those years, some people were so rich in association that all the romantic poets at all times and in all over the world felt ashamed.
Idiom story
During the Warring States period, Zou Ji, a minister of Qi, was more than eight feet tall (185cm today) and had a beautiful face. He put on gorgeous clothes and asked his wife who was beautiful with Xu Gong, a beautiful man in the north of the city? His wife and concubine said he was the most beautiful. The next day he asked the guests at home, and they said the same. However, when Xu Gong came to the north of the city, Zou Ji looked at himself in the mirror and felt ashamed.
Chinese PinYin : zì kuì fú rú
ashamed of one's inferiority
reach the same goal by different means. shū zhì tóng guī
know all the moves on the board. lǎo chéng liàn dá
be in harmony in appearanc but at variance in heart. mào hé qíng lí
speak of ice to insects that live only one summer. xià chóng yí bīng