I feel sorry for you
Pity, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Li á NW ǒ Li á NQ ī ng, which means to love each other; it mostly refers to lovers or couples. It's from a new account of the world: bewilderment.
The origin of Idioms
Liu Yiqing of the Southern Dynasty, Song Dynasty, wrote in a new account of the world, bewildered and drowned: "to love a Qing is to love a Qing. If I don't love a Qing, who should be a Qing."
Idiom usage
As a predicate or attributive; used between men and women. The ninth chapter of Wei Zian's the trace of the moon and flowers in Qing Dynasty: "there is only one beautiful person who is lonely and angry. I feel sorry for you, but I'm far away from you. " Jing Zhen and Quan Xiu lived together for a few days, and they were tied up with prostitutes all the time. The 50th chapter of the history of the Five Dynasties by Cai Dongfan
I feel sorry for you
goods overflow and people are happy - mín ān wù fù