one 's inmost feelings
Lose one's liver and drain one's gallbladder, a Chinese idiom. Pinyin is sh ū g ā NL ì D ǎ n, which means to offer one's liver and drip one's bile. It means to talk about your true thoughts sincerely.
Idiom explanation
Input: offer, express; Li: drop. Offer your liver and drip your bile. It means to talk about your true thoughts sincerely.
The origin of Idioms
Li Bai of the Tang Dynasty wrote a poem on a difficult journey: "if you don't see the Yan Family's emphasis on Guo Kai in the past, you can't help guessing that the Yan Family's support for Guo Kai is too strong. You can give thanks to Xi Xin and Le Yi, and lose the courage to serve the talents."
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms: liver and gall, liver and gall, liver and gall:
Idiom usage
I'm very loyal. I'm very loyal
one 's inmost feelings
meaning grasped imageries forgotten - dé yì wàng xiàng
Don't worry about what you've learned - shù jiào guǎn wén
one can't make bricks without straw - qiǎo fù nán wéi wú mǐ zhī chuī
each sticks to his own viewpoint - gè zhí jǐ jiàn
confront each other with daggers - jiàn bá nǔ zhāng
share the feelings and sentiments - hū xī xiāng tōng