Chui Ren Ti Yi
Chui Ren Ti Yi is a Chinese idiom. Its pinyin is Chu í R é NT í y ì, which means abandoning Ren Yi. It comes from the introduction of Jiuliu in Shaoshi Shanfang bicong by Hu Yinglin of Ming Dynasty.
Idiom usage
We must never do anything harmful to nature and reason.
The origin of Idioms
According to Hu Yinglin's Shaoshi Shanfang bicong · Jiuliu introduction in the Ming Dynasty, "the Zhou Dynasty advocated benevolence and righteousness, abandoned rites and music, and wanted to use one person's private imagination to sweep away the famous religion of a hundred generations."
Idiom explanation
Hammer: strike, beat; lift: raise. Abandon benevolence and righteousness.
Chui Ren Ti Yi
People are not saints, who can be faultless - rén fēi shèng xián,shú néng wú guò
Be modest and able to bear the talent - jīn néng fù cái
condemn both in speech and in writing - kǒu zhū bǐ fá