Goods are not for sale
It's a Chinese idiom. Pinyin is Hu ò é RB ù sh ò u, which means you want to sell but can't sell it. It comes from the eight chapters of Yongzhou, the story of the hill in the west of cobotan.
The idiom comes from Liu Zongyuan's Yongzhou Baji · Xiaoqiu in the west of cobotan in Tang Dynasty: "a small hill can't be one mu, it can be caged. Asked his master, he said: "the Tang family abandoned land, but did not sell goods." When asked about the price, he said, "only four hundred." Sell it for pity. "
Goods are not for sale
drag in all sorts of irrelevant matters - dōng xián xī chě
Huang Zhong's destruction and abandonment - huáng zhōng huǐ qì,wǎ fǔ léi míng
the writer 's sincerity shines through his words - qíng jiàn hū cí
Carved heart and wild goose claw - diāo xīn yàn zhǎo
Extremely vicious and ferocious - jí è qióng xiōng
be indecisive when decision is needed - dāng duàn bù duàn