neglect of social rules
Laissez faire, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is f à n à D à n à x í n à h á I, which means to indulge in behavior and to be informal. It comes from the second fold of "striving for gratitude".
Analysis of Idioms
Loose and uninhibited
The origin of Idioms
In Yuan Dynasty, Wu Mingshi's "striving for repayment of kindness" the second fold: "I can do everything I can to make him loose, but I can't prove it."
Idiom usage
It has a derogatory meaning. example preface to the Orchid Pavilion collection: the relationship between the lady and me, I admire you all my life. Or take all the embrace, realize the words in a room; or because of the trust, outside the laissez faire. He banger's "night stories with records of curing people" in Qing Dynasty: "those who are so comfortable with the meat pot, it's so good to curize them!"
neglect of social rules
Discerning the past and the present - dòng jiàn gǔ jīn
be struck by lightning and split into two halves - tiān dǎ léi pī
expect the reality to correspond to the name - zhēng míng zé shí