dare to do everything
Dare to do, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is g ǎ nzu ò g ǎ NW é I, which means to describe doing things without fear. From the romance of Sui and Tang Dynasties.
The origin of Idioms
"The romance of Sui and Tang Dynasties" 69: "dare to do, and I do not know fear in the palace."
Analysis of Idioms
Be cautious and timid
Idiom usage
Combined; as predicate and attribute; with commendatory meaning. Example: in Yuan Dynasty, Guan Hanqing's book Baodai Zhizhi beheads Lu zhailang, the third fold: "being obstinate doesn't want his wife or my wife. It's a bad custom. Who dares to do it?" Tang Jiandian was elected to the palace and granted talented people. He was intelligent. He was able to learn all kinds of music. He was brave and didn't know what to fear in the palace. Jian Ren of Qing Dynasty won the 69th chapter of the romance of Sui and Tang Dynasties
dare to do everything
Great achievements and great virtues - fēng gōng shuò dé
being put in the grease , it does not get glossy -- incorruptible official - zhī gāo mò rùn
feel uneasy even when eating and sleeping - qǐn shí bù ān
do not know whether it will turn out good or bad - jí xiōng wèi bǔ
a person who looks down upon everyone and fancies that nobody dare do anything to him - mò yù dú yě