have a guilty conscience , as one 's guilty conscience
Guilty conscience, idioms, as predicate, attribute, adverbial. Xu: I'm afraid. I'm afraid to be known when I've done something bad. It comes from the Song Dynasty's Shi Wu Ming's Lian Deng Hui Yao Chong Xian Chan Shi: "but I look after the waiter and say," is there anyone to see the abbot? " The waiter said, "yes." Shiyun: "a thief is guilty."
Idiom explanation
Explanation: Empty: afraid. I'm afraid to be known when I've done something bad.
Separate interpretation of words
To be a thief: 1. 2. Rob; plagiarize; steal. Modesty: 1. It means that one's heart is empty without prejudice or modest without complacency. 2. Timidity. 3. Neurasthenia. Also called abnormal heartbeat.
The origin of Idioms
In the Song Dynasty, Shi Wuming's liandenghuiyao Chongxian Zen master said, "but he looked after the waiter and said," is there anyone to see the abbot? " The waiter said, "yes." Shiyun: "a thief is guilty."
Examples of Idioms
At first, people didn't know about it, but they were guilty of it. The 60th chapter of Wu Jianren's twenty years of witnessing the strange situation in Qing Dynasty
Discrimination of words
[synonym]: guilty conscience, guilty heart [antonym]: a clear conscience, peace of mind, upright
Idiom usage
Usage: used as predicate, attribute and adverbial; refers to the deficiency of reason and heart
Chinese PinYin : zuò zéi xīn xū
have a guilty conscience , as one 's guilty conscience
Point the South and attack the North. zhǐ nán gōng běi
everyone has his own advantages. chǐ yǒu suǒ duǎn