Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional festivals - Uninhibited Pronunciation

Uninhibited Pronunciation

Unrestrained pronunciation is as follows:

[ bù jī ] Basic Explanation (书) (动) unrestrained: debauchery ~.

Detailed Explanation: also as "不覊". It is said that the talent and behavior are high and far-reaching, and cannot be constrained.

Detailed Explanation: also used as "不覊". It is said that the talent and behavior are not limited. Li Shan Note: "Uninhibited, meaning that the talent and behavior are far-reaching and cannot be constrained." Jin Xiangxiu 《思旧赋》:"Yu and Jikang, Lv An, live close to each other, and their people have uninhibited talents." Song He Wei 《春渚纪闻-颜几圣索酒友诗》:"Qiantang Yan Qizi Zi Qisheng, a handsome and uninhibited man, drank every day."

Guo Moruo, "Talking about Cai Wenji's Eighteen Pieces of Barbarian Pipe": "Like Eighteen Pieces of Barbarian Pipe, no matter in the form or content, that kind of uninhibited and majestic spirit ...... is by no means something that the people of the Six Dynasties or even the people of the Sui and Tang Dynasties can reach."

It is said that the behavior does not follow the rites and laws. New Book of Tang - Yuan Jie biography: "Jie young uninhibited, seventeen is folded to the study, the matter of Yuan Dexiu." The General Remarks of the Alarming World - Tang Xieyuan's Marriage with a Smile: "Tang Yin is a loose and unruly person with a light and proud will."

The History of Ming Dynasty - Yuan Wei Biography: "Wei's behavior was uninhibited, and he was impeached by Bao Xiao, the imperial historian, but the emperor excused him from the crime."

Liberation uninhibited [fàng dàng bù jī]Pejorative: describing a person who is indulgent and capricious, unchecked and unrestrained. Positive meaning: not subject to the constraints of tradition, daring to break the tradition, aspiring to a free life.1.Idioms by Source Allusion During the Jin Dynasty, Wang Changwen was a hard-working and studious man since he was a child, with an aloof and unruly character, and he never took the state's conscription into account. When the state summoned him to be a deputy governor, he secretly ran away. He closed his door to write intently, and he authored a four-volume book called "Tongxuanjing".

When Emperor Wu of the Jin Dynasty was in drought in Sichuan, the government opened warehouses to borrow grain, and he borrowed a lot of grain which he could not repay and got into trouble with the lawsuit. The idiom of "unruly" should be distinguished from "untamed", which focuses on not being subject to the constraints of others, mainly those who are powerful or influential; "Unbridled" focuses on not being bound by moral conventions