boast without shame
It's a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is d à y á Nb à C á n, which means to talk big without feeling embarrassed. It comes from Zhu Xi's the fourteenth chapter of the Analects of Confucius.
The origin of Idioms
"Confucius said," if you don't make a mistake in your words, it's hard to do it. " Zhu Xi of Song Dynasty noted: "if you are too big to be ashamed, you don't have to be ambitious, but you don't have to judge whether it is possible or not. It's not hard to put his words into practice! "
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym]: boasting, boasting, and being rude; [antonym]: not showing one's edge, being ashamed of oneself, and belittling oneself
Idiom usage
When Yan Zhixiao listened to his proud student, his face became sad. Liang Bin's red flag
boast without shame
be under attack from all directions - sì miàn shòu dí
Every inch is worth every penny - cùn liáng zhū chēng
rely on others for success in work - yīn rén chéng shì
to work hard and live plainly and frugally - gōng kǔ shí jiǎn