one's inmost feelings
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is p ō UG ā NL ì D ǎ n, which means treating each other sincerely. It comes from the biography of Huaiyin marquis in historical records.
The origin of Idioms
In the biography of Huaiyin marquis in historical records, it is said that "I am willing to put my heart on my stomach, lose my liver and gall, and be a fool." According to the biography of Li Delin in the book of Sui Dynasty, "Bai Pi Shu Yin, Yue mu in the four directions, Ji Tu Chen Wen, Shun Yi Zhao's request, pour out one's courage, sing in the day and sing in the night."
Idiom usage
As predicate, object, attribute; used in figurative sentences.
Examples
Chapter 21 of romance of the Three Kingdoms written by Luo Guanzhong of Ming Dynasty: "Cheng changed his color and said: Gong is the emperor's uncle of Han Dynasty, so he cut his liver and poured his guts to tell each other. How can Gong cheat?"
one's inmost feelings
a swarm of people running after unwholesome things - rú yǐ mù shān
Not in his position, not in his politics - bù zài qí wèi,bù móu qí zhèng
Watching and listening to the wind - guān huà tīng fēng
barter the trunk for the branches - qù běn qū mò
When the river is choked up, it will collapse - chuān yōng bì kuì