obstinate and perverse
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is sh ē Nb ì g ù J ù, which means to firmly refuse to accept other people's opinions. It comes from the preface to the new edition of Yuan history.
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym]: closed and stubborn
Idiom usage
He was determined not to accept other people's example and took a deep and firm attitude towards the imperial court in the mainland. There was little political contact. Fan Wenlan, general history of China, part three, chapter six, section one
The origin of Idioms
Wei Yuan's preface to the new edition of the history of the Yuan Dynasty in the Qing Dynasty: "it is regarded as a conspiracy to present the book of Yilan in the golden chamber, and it is firmly refused."
obstinate and perverse
pull up enemy flags and behead enemy generals on the battle field - qiān qí qǔ jiàng
A long way to know horsepower, a long time to see people - lù yáo zhī mǎ lì,rì jiǔ jiàn rén xīn
the music lingered in the air long after the performance ended - niǎo niǎo yú yīn
a cool breeze felt by all the guests - mǎn zuò fēng shēng