Give up one's anger and discard one's flaws
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is Ju ā NF è NQ ì Xi á, which means abandoning resentment and cracks, indicating that it is better to repair. It comes from Xiang Yu's Ci by Duke pseudo Hou.
Notes on Idioms
Flaw: the crack on the jade is a metaphor for the old crack.
The origin of Idioms
Su Shi of the Song Dynasty wrote in Xiangyu's Ci by imitating the Duke of marquis: "I am willing to donate my anger and discard my flaws with the king from now on, and continue the happiness of the past."
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or object; used in writing.
Give up one's anger and discard one's flaws
presence of the two interested parties plus a third disinterested party as a witness - sān duì liù miàn
insatiably greedy like wolves and tigers - láng tān hǔ shì
the turn of fortune after reaching one extreme - bō jí bì fù
giant earthquakes and landslides - tiān bēng dì liè