swallow insult and humiliation silently
Hold your breath, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is B ǐ ngq ì t ū NSH ē ng, which means that you still have to swallow your breath; it means that you have to bear with your breath and dare not say anything. It's from the second moment of surprise.
The origin of Idioms
Ling Mengchu of the Ming Dynasty, Volume 39 of "the second moment makes a case of surprise": "the poor son, holding his breath, crouches outside the wall, and is howled by the dogs."
Analysis of Idioms
I can't bear it
Idiom usage
He is afraid to fight in voice.
swallow insult and humiliation silently
Strike from the east to the West - dōng shēng xī jī
have the punishment exceed the crime - fá bù dāng zuì
If two tigers fight each other, there must be a wound - èr hǔ xiāng dòu,bì yǒu yī shāng
take hold of bushes and trees to pull oneself up - pān téng lǎn gě
to concentrate on the main points - tí gāng jǔ lǐng