feel at ease and justified
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is x ī n ā NL ǐ D é, which means that what you think you are doing is reasonable and calm. From the heroine of Eastern Europe.
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: a clear conscience; antonym: uneasy, a guilty conscience
The origin of Idioms
The third chapter of "Eastern European heroines" written by Lingnan lady in feather clothes in Qing Dynasty: "originally, we only seek our own peace of mind, but we can't care about the hardships and happiness of the outside world."
Idiom usage
In recent years, I have been struggling with this problem for a long time, trying to find a way to settle down and get it by myself. In Liang Qichao's Fu Zhang Dongsun's book on the socialist movement, when he forgot the truth and believed in lies, he felt at ease and became interested in nature. Lu Xun's miscellaneous talks after illness
feel at ease and justified
A burning wife and a burning child - huǒ qī huī zǐ
spread rumours to confuse the people - zào yáo huò zhòng
everything goes well and smoothly - wàn shì hēng tōng
splits off as it meets the edge of knife without effort - yíng rèn lì jiě