have no contact with each other
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is Shu ǐ m ǐ w ú Ji ā o, which means that you have never eaten anything from others. It means that the officials are clean and honest and do not take things from the people. It also means that there is no communication between the two sides. From Xie Tianxiang.
The origin of Idioms
The fourth fold of Xie Tianxiang written by Guan Hanqing in Yuan Dynasty: "I've been here for three years, and I've treated the common people like rice and water, but I'm not infected by Yu Tianxiang."
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym]: water and fire have nothing to do with each other, water and fire have nothing to do with each other [antonym]: extortion
Idiom usage
As predicate and attributive, it refers to clean and honest officials. Wu Jianren's "muddleheaded world" Volume 11: brothers have no friends in Baxian county. Even if they have something to do, they have to do it by themselves. Shi Naian's Water Margin in Ming Dynasty the 22nd chapter "Yan Po's great disturbance in Yuncheng County Zhu Tong's righteous interpretation of song Gongming" he had no relationship with the old man, and did not interfere.
have no contact with each other
take advantage of another 's perilous state - chèn rén zhī wēi
spit out a mouthful in the middle of eating and bind up one 's hair in the midst of a bath in order to see visitors - tǔ bǔ wò fà
those who are above and those who are below are all on good terms - shàng hé xià mù