disclaim all achievements one has made
It is a Chinese idiom. Pinyin is g ō ngch é NGF ú J ū, which means to describe a person who has made a contribution but does not attribute it to himself. It comes from Shi Gang Ping Yao Zhou Ji Nan Wang.
The origin of Idioms
Li Zhi of the Ming Dynasty wrote in his book Shi Gang Ping Yao · Zhou Ji · Nan Wang: "it's difficult for a virtuous general to succeed in his life."
Idiom usage
To be not proud of one's merits
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym]: failure to achieve success [antonym]: a meritorious man takes himself for granted
disclaim all achievements one has made
form a clique for selfish purposes - zhí dǎng yíng sī