impartial
No partisanship, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is w ú D ǎ NGW ú PI ā n, which means to describe doing things fairly without bias. It is the same as "no partisanship and no party". From the book of history, Hong Fan.
Idiom explanation
It's fair and unbiased. It is the same as "no partisanship and no party".
The origin of Idioms
Hongfan, the book of history: "there is no partisanship and no bias, and the way of king is flat."
Idiom usage
As a predicate or attributive; used in life
Examples
The third fold of Ming Dynasty's Wu Mingshi's Lin Tong Dou Bao: "then I'll give you the order of Ming Dynasty, no two, no move; the right of reward and punishment, no partisanship."
Analysis of Idioms
Degree of common use: Average
Emotional color: commendatory words
Idiom structure: United
Time of birth: ancient times
impartial
bear down on one with the weight of mount taishan - tài shān yā dǐng
ask people whether they feel hot - xū hán wèn nuǎn