follow the prescribed order
Step by step is a Chinese idiom. Its pronunciation is "anb ù Ji ù B ā n", which is a neutral word. Department, class: category, order. That is to say, it belongs to.
It refers to doing things in accordance with a certain order and following a certain procedure. It also refers to doing things in accordance with the old rules and lacks the spirit of innovation. From Wen Fu.
terms
Step by step: according to a certain order or deployment. According to, according to: according to, according to; Department: deployment; class: a group of people in order to form a line; on class: in order to return, metaphor in or placed in the right position.
Analysis of Idioms
Step by step and stick to the rules
Idiom usage
In Zheng Zhenduo's the last of Huang Gongjun: "but Huang Gongjun's grandfather, he began to read books. Like ordinary scholars, he was on a step-by-step way to put the Eight Legged talents into the imperial family." Lao She's four generations in the same hall: "if he can read some books step by step, he will become a respectable, even learned person."
The origin of Idioms
Lu Ji's Wenfu in Jin Dynasty: "then select the Department of justice and case, and the class will be the place to examine the CI."
Chinese PinYin : àn bù jiù bān
follow the prescribed order
become aware of one 's errors and turn back from one 's wrong path. mí ér zhī fǎn