harboring no evil thought
Open minded, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is j ī nhu á IL ě ilu ò, which means open-minded and open-minded. It comes from the collection of bamboo groves hidden in obscurity by Hu Mengyu of Song Dynasty.
Source of allusion
Hu Mengyu of Song Dynasty wrote in the collection of bamboo forest's folly and seclusion, the eighteen essays of Xiangzhou's sacrifice to my younger brother: "my younger brother is open-minded and respectful in making friends."
words whose meaning is similar
have largeness of mind
antonym
Double faced
English translation
bemagnanimousandunselfishhavelargenessofmind
Idiom information
Idiom explanation: mind: mind; open and aboveboard: aboveboard. Example of idiom: in the Qing Dynasty, Chu people won the 54th chapter of the romance of the Sui and Tang Dynasties: "when you are a man, you should be open-minded. Why don't you look at your family?" degree of common use: General emotional color: commendatory words grammatical usage: as object and attribute; for people idiom structure: subject predicate type generation time: ancient times
harboring no evil thought
Never forget the past, the teacher of the future - qián shì bù wàng,hòu shì zhī shī