be guilty of dereliction or serious violation of law
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is B à if à Lu à NJ à, which means to corrupt laws and discipline. It comes from the biography of Yuan Shaozhuan in the later Han Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
In Yuan Shaochuan, the book of the later Han Dynasty, written by Fan Ye of the Southern Dynasty, it is said that "he set his mind to be a professional, robbed the province, humiliated Wang Liao, disobeyed the law and discipline, summoned three platforms, and autocratic government."
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym]: disobey the law and discipline [antonym]: abide by the law
Idiom usage
We should crack down on those who violate the law and discipline.
Chinese PinYin : bài fǎ luàn jì
be guilty of dereliction or serious violation of law
look for the tip of the branch while give up the trunk of the tree. sǔn běn zhú mò