have neither fault to find with nor praise to bestow
No blame, no reputation, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is w ú Ji ù w ú y ù, which means that there are no mistakes or achievements. It's a metaphor for average work performance. It comes from the book of the Han Dynasty, biography of Zhao Jingsu, King Liu and Peng.
The origin of Idioms
Ban Gu of the Eastern Han Dynasty wrote in the book of the Han Dynasty, biography of Zhao Jingsu, King Liu and Peng: "when you ask Hou Chang of Wu Shi, you say," no blame, no reputation. " He said, "that's OK."
Idiom usage
It refers to the general performance of work. Examples Deng and Zhang are renowned for their contributions. Fan Ye's biography of Deng Biao and Zhang Yu in the book of the later Han Dynasty and Kun in the book of changes in the Southern Dynasty, Song Dynasty, said: "it's all right to cover the bag, and it's all right to cover the words."
have neither fault to find with nor praise to bestow
travel during the day and sleep at night - xiǎo xíng yè zhù
annex and absorb weak countries - jiān ruò gōng mèi
pop one 's head in and look about - tàn tóu tàn nǎo
make one 's utmost efforts to fight for one 's point of view - jù lǐ lì zhēng