be not attentive to offenses
In Chinese, the Pinyin is f à n é RB à Ji à o, which means to be offended or rude. It comes from the Analects of Confucius, Taibo.
The origin of Idioms
In the Analects of Confucius, Taibo in pre Qin period, it is said that "to be able to ask and not to be able to ask, to be able to ask more than to be able to ask; to be able to ask if there is nothing, to be able to ask if there is nothing, to be able to ask if there is nothing, to be able to ask if there is nothing, to be able
Idiom usage
Complex form; as predicate, object and attribute; with commendatory meaning.
Examples
The 55th chapter of Li Luyuan's Qiludeng in the Qing Dynasty: "the principle of benefiting the people is:" if there is no school for a crime, why should we punish it? " Everyone smiles and disperses. "
Lu Xun once said: "to err without correction is to be forgiven; to return an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth is to be straight."
It is rare to see such a magnanimous person as him who breaks the rules without learning.
Chinese PinYin : fàn ér bù jiào
be not attentive to offenses
Deceiving the king and the country. qī jūn wù guó
as superb as if designed by the supernatural. shén shī guǐ shè
outmanoeuvre the enemy our glasses of wine. zūn zǔ zhé chōng
would not explain unless one is desperately anxious to learn. bù fèn bù qǐ