To refuse to accept
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is f ù g ù B ù f ú, which means to rely on danger rather than surrender. From "Zhou Li Xia Guan Da Sima".
The origin of Idioms
"Zhou Li Xia Guan Da Sima" said: "when the wild and desolate people are scattered, they will be cut off; if they are not satisfied, they will be invaded." Zheng Xuan notes: "negative, still rely on also, solid, risk can depend on, to solid also; not satisfied, not big also."
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attributive; used in writing. Chapter 99 of outlaws of the Marsh: "Zhang Wei and others are besieged by soldiers, and they are not satisfied."
To refuse to accept
all the stars twinkled around the bright moon - zhòng xīng cuán yuè
like a spring dream which vanished without a trace - chūn mèng wú hén
appreciation goes without saying - tāo zài zhī jǐ
harsh penal codes in great numbers - qiū tú mì wǎng
suffer from an unrighted wrong or grievance - fù qū xián yuān