bear shame and humiliation
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is h á ng ò ur ě NCH ǐ, which means to endure humiliation. It comes from shanggaozong Fengshi.
The origin of Idioms
Hu Quan of the Song Dynasty wrote in shanggaozong's Fengshi: "Your Majesty is still unconscious. He has exhausted his people's blood but has no compassion. He has forgotten the country's great collation but has not reported it. He is indecent and shameful. He is willing to take the world as his official."
Idiom usage
Used as predicate, attributive, adverbial, etc. Li Zhi's Yu Yue: a life of emotion: "the superior can't be like the Golden Horse Gate of Dongfang Sheng. He takes Wancheng as his colleague and friend. He is dirty and shameless. He plays the official road." Ba Jin's dream and drunkenness: but the "all living beings" who accumulate the blessing of the afterlife or dream of heaven after death have long been forgotten, and no one even knows where they buried their bones.
bear shame and humiliation
folly of trying to see the sky with a basin over one 's head - dài pén wàng tiān
be closely related and mutually dependent - chún chǐ xiāng yī
Three commandments for gentlemen - jūn zǐ sān jiè