Stick to the weak and embrace the disabled
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is sh ǒ uqu ē B à OC á n, which means to keep incomplete things. It is used to refer to the old-fashioned people who don't want to change. It is also called "guarding the weak and embracing the disabled". From Chen Duxiu's my last awakening.
Idiom explanation
Hold on to the incomplete things. It is compared to the old-fashioned, not thinking about change. Also known as "shouque baocan".
The origin of Idioms
Chen Duxiu's my last awakening: "since the introduction of Western civilization into our country, the first person who promoted our awakening was academics, which was inferior to each other, and the whole country knew it; the second was politics, which has been proved by the political phenomena over the years, and has the tendency of not being able to defend the weak and cling to the weak."
Idiom usage
It is used as predicate, object and adverbial.
Analysis of Idioms
A synonym: to be conservative
Antonym: bringing forth the new through the old
Stick to the weak and embrace the disabled
The government is light and the situation is weak - guān qīng shì wēi
Drinking blood to break the heart - yǐn xuè bēng xīn
Study classics and make history - yán jīng zhù shǐ
iron walls and brass partitions - tiě bì tóng qiáng
not bother to ask questions or listen to what 's said - bù wén bù wèn