| 忌惮 | [ jì dàn ] to be afraid of the consequences, restraining fear |
| 忌羡 | [ jì xiàn ] to envy |
| 忌讳 | [ jì huì ] taboo, to avoid as taboo, to abstain from |
| ⇒ 外宽内忌 | [ waì kuān neì jì ] magnanimous on the outside, but hateful on the inside (idiom) |
| ⇒ 妒贤忌能 | [ dù xián jì néng ] to envy the virtuous and talented (idiom) |
| ⇒ 恣行无忌 | [ zì xíng wú jì ] to behave recklessly |
| ⇒ 无所畏忌 | [ wú suǒ weì jì ] without any fear of consequences, totally devoid of scruples |
| ⇒ 田忌赛马 | [ tián jì saì mǎ ] Tian Ji races his horses (and accepts one loss in order to ensure two wins) (idiom) |
| ⇒ 百无禁忌 | [ baǐ wú jìn jì ] all taboos are off (idiom); anything goes, nothing is taboo |
| ⇒ 禁忌语 | [ jìn jì yǔ ] taboo language |
| ⇒ 童言无忌 | [ tóng yán wú jì ] children's words carry no harm (idiom) |
| ⇒ 肆无忌惮 | [ sì wú jì dàn ] absolutely unrestrained, unbridled, without the slightest scruple |
| ⇒ 讳疾忌医 | [ huì jí jì yī ] hiding a sickness for fear of treatment (idiom); fig. concealing a fault to avoid criticism, to keep one's shortcomings secret, to refuse to listen to advice |
| ⇒ 长孙无忌 | [ zhǎng sūn wú jì ] Zhangsun Wuji (c. 594-659), politician and historian of early Tang |
| ⇒ 顾忌 | [ gù jì ] to have misgivings, apprehension, worry, qualm, scruple |