cherish an undying hatred

cherish an undying hatred

Hate, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is sh ē NW ù t ò ngju é, refers to someone or something disgust, hate to the extreme. It comes from Mencius with all his heart, written by Mencius Ke of pre Qin Dynasty.

The origin of Idioms

"It can be said that Si is the wish of his hometown" in Mencius. The annotation of Zhu Xi in Song Dynasty: "if you don't go through the door and don't hate it, it's lucky that you don't see your relatives, and it's abhorrent that you don't hate it."

Idiom usage

Wen Yiduo's about Confucianism, Taoism and Bandits: "so the Confucianists' opposition to Taoism is only verbal and superficial, unlike his real hatred of Mohism." Recalling Mr. Lu Xun Xiao Hong: young people write too hastily. Mr. Lu Xun hates it

Analysis of Idioms

Synonyms: hatred of evil, heartache, deep hatred Antonyms: deep love, can't put it down

0 Questions

Ask a Question

Your email address will not be published.

captcha