There's nothing to be ashamed of
In Chinese, Pinyin is j ì y á NW ú Su ǒ, which means there is no place for face. I'm ashamed of myself. It comes from the biography of CAI Mo in the book of Jin.
The origin of Idioms
According to the biography of CAI Mo in the book of Jin, when he moved to Shizhong and situ, shangshurang said: "I have to save myself and cherish my kindness The emperor's move to Donglong, the emperor's move to the emperor's court, has increased the number of officials who are afraid of fighting, and they have nothing to show for themselves. "
Analysis of Idioms
I'm ashamed of myself
Idiom usage
To act as a predicate, attribute, or object
There's nothing to be ashamed of
production surpasses consumption - shēng zhòng shí guǎ
harbour resentment in one 's bosom hatred against - huái hèn zài xīn
act in undue confidence of one 's own ability and look down upon others - shì cái ào wù