not to mind taking the trouble
Bubeiqifan is a Chinese idiom. Its pronunciation is B ù y à NQ í f á n, which means not to be bothered and troublesome. It describes patience. It comes from Xia Jingqu's exposed words of the old man in the wild in the Qing Dynasty.
Analysis of Idioms
Teaching is tireless and painstaking
The origin of Idioms
The 138th review of Xia Jingqu's Ye sou Pao Yan in the Qing Dynasty: "every few years I read it, I will tell you that Su Chen gave birth to sons and grandchildren, married a woman and married a woman, and got the first prize in science and technology. And readers are not tired of it, even in one visit, they have seen it one after another, and there is no such thing as redundancy and complication. "
Idiom usage
It is used as predicate and adverbial, with commendatory meaning to describe patient. Example Sun Li's xiuluji Ouyangxiu's Prose: "he observes carefully, thinks repeatedly, blends in his heart, and then writes an article, and never gets tired of deliberating and revising. Today's historiography, however, is different from that of Lu yanri, whose daily life is so trivial that it is not too despicable. A biography of Daoism by Yan Fu in Qing Dynasty
not to mind taking the trouble
lower one 's banners and muffle one 's drums - yǎn qí xī gǔ
the inexpensive gift by scholars - xiù cái rén qíng
Remonstrate the corpse and slander the butcher - jiàn shī bàng tú
Water carries the boat, water capsizes the boat - shuǐ zé zài zhōu,shuǐ zé fù zhōu
the feelings of the people are for - rén xīn guī xiàng
Helping the frontier and losing money - zhù biān shū cái