be strictly just and impartial
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is sh ǒ UZH è NGB ù Hu í, which means sticking to the right path and not yielding. It comes from the biography of Wang PI in northern history.
Analysis of Idioms
Keep upright
The origin of Idioms
"The biography of Wang PI in the northern history" says, "I despise the powerful, but I will never return."
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attributive; used in writing.
Examples
At the end of Tang Kaiyuan, Zhang Jiuling was the only minister. Jiuling had already disobeyed his orders, and the emperor of Ming Dynasty never heard of it again, which led to the Lushan Rebellion.
In the first collection of yuyinconghua in Tiaoxi, Volume 2, Volume 16, song Jingwen, written by Hu Zai of Song Dynasty, "the Duke is a poem to see the meaning, in which a couplet says," the straight stem is the end, the real steel is not the hook. "It's not like that. 」
be strictly just and impartial
the dog barks at a man who is not his master - gǒu fèi fēi zhǔ
have relations with a foreign country - lǐ tōng wài guó
A good man does not suffer at present - hǎo hàn bù chī yǎn qián kuī