do things offensive to God and reason
It's a Chinese idiom,
Pinyin is sh à ngTi à NH à IL à,
Explanation: it describes doing things ferociously, cruelly and heartlessly.
It comes from Pu Songling's strange tales from a lonely studio, Lu wubing.
Entry
do things offensive to God and reason
Pinyin
shānɡtiānhàilǐ
Citation explanation
It describes doing things ferociously and mercilessly. Pu Songling's Liaozhaizhiyi · lvwubing in the Qing Dynasty: "the Lord of the hall regards me as the dirty instructor in the world, extorting money that is harmful to nature, in order to suck people's carbuncle and hemorrhoids?" Chapter 7 of the biography of heroes and Heroines: "I had expected that in addition to robbing money and killing people, there would be some evil activities in this temple. I was eager to save young master an, and I couldn't take care of it." Chapter 6 of Lao Can's Travels: just because I want to be an official too much, and I'm eager to be a big official, so I do it in a hurtful way! Chapter 1 and 2 of the strange situation witnessed in 20 years: this man is too hurtful! How can we expose the corpse of his father to do this business?
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms: inhuman, inhuman, heartless
Idiom usage
As a predicate, an object, or an attribute
do things offensive to God and reason
with one 's hair standing on end - máo fā sǒng rán