behave recklessly
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Z ì Su ī w ú J ì, which means to act recklessly. It comes from the biography of guicalyx in the history of Ming Dynasty.
Idiom explanation
Wansui: indulgence; avoid: scruple. It describes doing evil at will without scruple.
The origin of Idioms
In the biography of guicalyx in the history of Ming Dynasty: "at the beginning, the officials of Yili were unable to slander the rulers, but at the end, he denounced them as not being Taoist and wanted to refuse to discuss. His words were free and unrestrained, and the court officials were especially ill
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: act recklessly and unscrupulously
Idiom usage
To have no scruples about
Idiom usage
For example, when the emperor Shizu gave rewards and punishments to the public, the governor did not dare to. History of the Qing Dynasty
behave recklessly
fearful with a guilty conscience - huái zhe guǐ tāi
forsake heresy and return to the truth - gǎi xié guī zhèng
the sacred rules of the religious order - qīng guī jiè lǜ
If a fish drinks water, he knows when it is warm or cold - rú yú yǐn shuǐ,lěng nuǎn zì zhī
the students surpass the teacher - bīng hán yú shuǐ