neither look nor give attention
Ignore, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is B ù ch ǒ UB ù C ǎ I, meaning do not look and do not answer. It comes from Su Fuzhi's "Jin Yin · Zhou's return home".
The origin of Idioms
Su Fuzhi of the Ming Dynasty wrote "the return of Zhou's family in the golden seal" that "when my son-in-law failed to return, his family did not succeed."
Idiom usage
The thirteenth chapter of the history of Zen written by Fang Ruhao: "brother, I'm in agreement with you. It's like glue. There has never been any difference. Why do you ignore it today?" The first volume of Yu Shi Ming Yan written by Feng Menglong in Ming Dynasty: "brother Xing is on his way. He only thinks about the whole family and ignores them all day long." The sixth chapter of Wu Jingzi's scholars in Qing Dynasty: my aunt only respected two brothers of the Wang family and ignored us. We have no reason to offend boss Yan for him today.
Analysis of Idioms
Antonym: enthusiastic
neither look nor give attention
take what our forebears have left us but as a departure for new inventions - chéng qián qǐ hòu
forget sb . 's past error and forgive him - lüè jì yuán qíng
dupe a person and then pull the ladder from under him - shàng shù bá tī