Soft but not guilty
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is R ó u é RB ù f à n, which means gentle temperament but inviolable. It comes from the biography of Hu guangzhuan in the later Han Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Hu guangzhuan, the book of the later Han Dynasty: "gentle but not guilty, polite and loyal, worried about the public as a family."
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attributive; used of a person's character, etc
Soft but not guilty
being abused at home , one sells his indignity elsewhere - shì nù shì sè
the hearts come together across the land - shuài tǔ guī xīn
the pigs dash and the wolves rush - shǐ tū láng bēn