suffer from an unrighted wrong or grievance
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is f ù Q ū h á NYU ā n, which means to suffer injustice and endure injustice. From Wangjiang Pavilion by Guan Hanqing in Yuan Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
The fourth fold of Wangjiang Pavilion written by Guan Hanqing in Yuan Dynasty: "he just needs to force me to take apart my long branches and give birth to my shaking lotus. In fact, I am wronged. "
Idiom usage
In general, it can be used as predicate, object, attribute and adverbial. We can't let such a Communist Party member plead for the people die of injustice. We must apply for snow for him.
suffer from an unrighted wrong or grievance
cut off from the long to support the deficiency of the short - jié cháng bǔ duǎn
Back to the mountains and back to the sea - huí shān zhuǎn hǎi