furious pride
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Ji é à ob à x à n, meaning fierce and stubborn, arrogant and disobedient. It comes from Chen Liang of Song Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Chen Liang of the Song Dynasty wrote in the theory of drinking from the ancients: after the minister's fear has been solved, the winner will show his power, the loser will resist danger, and he will be rebellious to refuse his majesty
Idiom usage
In Lu Xun's commemoration of Mr. Liu Hezhen: "I always think that a student who can resist a broad-based headmaster without being subjugated by snobbery should be somewhat rebellious and sharp in any case, but she often smiles and has a very gentle attitude."
Defiant
forget sb . 's past error and forgive him - lüè jì yuán xīn
study by the light of reflected snow or glow-worms - xuě chuāng yíng jǐ
the hair standing on end and the face blanching with fright - zhà máo biàn sè
Under the heavy reward, there must be brave men - zhòng shǎng zhī xià,bì yǒu yǒng fū