be impartial to
Fair and selfless, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is g ō ngzh è NGW ú s ī, which means to be impartial and selfless. It comes from Xunzi Fu by Zhao Xun Kuang in the Warring States period.
The origin of Idioms
"Xunzi Fu" said: "fair and selfless, anti see vertical and horizontal." "Huainanzi xiuwuxun" says, "if you are Yao, you will have eight colorful eyebrows and nine orifices, and you will be impartial and selfless. In a word, all the people will be united." Wen Xinhai's return to Liaodong at the end of the Ming Dynasty to listen to Yuan Keli in Suiyang: "Yang Taixi hurriedly came forward and politely said:" but what I feel most rare is that adults don't recognize power and dignitaries, only recognize the justice and selflessness of Wang FA, and the iron face is merciless. "
Analysis of Idioms
Antonym: false public, corrupt and pervert the law. synonyms: selfless, selfless, business
Idiom usage
At the time of the Zhou and Qin Dynasties, there was already a very thorough set of ideas, that is, to be fair and impartial, not to avoid relatives and grudges, to make a comprehensive assessment of the name and the truth, and to punish those who believe in rewards. On Cao Zhi by Guo Moruo
Idiom explanation
It's fair and selfless.
be impartial to
Four in the evening and three in the morning - mù sì cháo sān
What you say comes with what you say - yán chū huò suí
persistent rumours against someone can shake the strongest confidence in him - zēng mǔ tóu zhù
be influenced by what one constantly sees and hears - ěr rǔ mù rǎn