have neither kin nor relatives
The Chinese idiom, w ú Q ī NW ú g ù, refers to the absence of relatives and old friends. It comes from Jin Ping Mei CI Hua.
The origin of Idioms
Chapter 89 of Jinpingmei Cihua written by Lanling Xiaosheng: "the slave is in his hands, and he has no relatives. If the slave doesn't remember to burn a piece of paper for him, how can he get by?"
Idiom usage
Used as predicate, attribute, interpersonal relationship, etc
have neither kin nor relatives
benefit all the people in the world - jiān shàn tiān xià
follow suit without knowing why - ǎi rén kàn chǎng
abuse the law and practise favouritism - xùn qíng wǎng fǎ