unmoral
Chinese idioms, Pinyin is w ú D é RCH ē n ɡ, meaning no virtue can be praised. It also refers to the indescribable virtue. From the Analects of Confucius Ji Shi.
The origin of Idioms
In the Analects of Confucius, Ji Shi said, "on the day of Qi Jing's public Ma Qiansi's death, the people have no virtue to call him."
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attributive; used in writing. Example: Huang xianzhuan in the book of the later Han Dynasty: "scholars and gentlemen are not satisfied with what they see, they are not far-reaching and they are not stingy. Will it be called "Dao Zhou Xing Quan, without virtue?" Li Xian notes: "the Tao is well prepared and the nature is all one. Without virtue, you can't be famous for your virtue. "
unmoral
treatment chosen according to the variability of an individual - yīn rén zhì yí
surpassing the ancients and amazing the contemporaries -- earthshaking - zhèn gǔ shuò jīn
the kindness of caring for -- saying of the sons for their parents ' kindness - gù fù zhī ēn