have the order reversed
Putting the cart before the horse is a Chinese idiom, and Pinyin is B ě nm ò D à ozh ì. Ben: root; end: tip; place: put.
It means that metaphor reverses the relationship between primary and secondary, essential and non essential. It's from new learning in suidezhou.
Analysis of Idioms
Antonym is to keep the balance between the main and the end
The origin of Idioms
Jin Wumingshi's suidezhou Xinxue Ji: "however, if it is not the trial of knowledge and governance, it is not impossible to put the cart before the horse."
Idiom usage
Subject predicate type; as predicate, object, attribute; metaphor mistakes the priority of things. Examples 1. If you should be brief, you should be detailed but not brief, and if you should be detailed, you should be brief but not detailed. You don't want to criticize? act or talk like a fool! Qu Bo's "forest sea and snow plain" 1 2. Song Zhuxi's "collection of Zhu Wen's official documents": "yesterday's doubts; the disease of putting the cart before the horse". It means to reverse the order of the fundamental things and the minor and less important things.
Chinese PinYin : běn mò dào zhì
have the order reversed
have an uninterrupted career of advancement. gān tóu rí shàng
gain victory with unstained swords. bīng wèi xuě rèn
swallow humiliation and bear a heavy load. rěn rǔ fù zhòng
mutually beget each other. xiāng shēng xiāng chéng