Beheading and bleeding
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is zh ǎ NT ó UL ì Xu è, which means to uphold justice regardless of life and death. From the water margin by Shi Naian of Ming Dynasty.
Idiom usage
Today, he is a man who has been beheaded.
The origin of Idioms
Ming Shi Naian's twenty seventh chapter of outlaws of the Marsh: "I'm a bloody man, how dare I tease my lover!"
Idiom explanation
It is described as upholding justice regardless of life and death.
Beheading and bleeding
offer one 's own coat and food -- to treat one 's friends sincerely - jiě yī tuī shí
After one thing, one will gain wisdom - jīng yī shì, zhǎng yī zhì