supercilious
The Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y ǎ NK ō ngs ì h ǎ I, is used to describe being arrogant and unable to see anything. It comes from the answer to Geng Sikou written by Li Zhi of Ming Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Li Zhi's answer to Geng Sikou in the Ming Dynasty: "is the canal open-minded and willing to follow others?"
Idiom usage
It refers to people's arrogance. Who would like to say that master five is always arrogant. Chapter 112 of xiaowuyi
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym]: arrogance and [antonym]: modesty and prudence
supercilious
the hill convulsed and the bell echoed - shān bēng zhōng yìng
respect justice and abide by the laws - fèng gōng rú fǎ
round and round the firewood is bound - chóu móu shù xīn