make frequent changes in policies or measures
The order issued in the morning is changed in the evening. It describes that government decrees are often changed, which makes people at a loss. It can be used as predicate, attribute, complement and clause. Morning.
The source of the idiom: in Hanshu shihuozhi, written by Ban Gu of the Eastern Han Dynasty: "the government is in a hurry and tyrannical, the Fu is collected from time to time, and it is changed in the morning but in the evening."
Idiom explanation
Orders issued in the morning are changed in the evening.
Examples of Idioms
In the sixth chapter of Guanzi Zhuan written by Liang Qichao in Qing Dynasty, it is said that "the people can not adapt to it; or the second and third law violates the seventh and eighth law, and the officials turn a blind eye to it."
Discrimination of words
The usage of antonym is invariable. It is used as a serial verb, a predicate, an attribute, a complement and a clause. It is used for policy change
Idioms and allusions
During the period of Emperor Wen of the Western Han Dynasty, bureaucratic landlords aggravated the exploitation of peasants, and many of them went bankrupt and fled. The crown prince ordered Chao CuO to write a book on expensive millet to the emperor. He proposed to crack down on the speculations of businessmen, limit the exploitation of peasants by bureaucratic landlords, and put forward that the policy should be stable, not be changed every day, and pay attention to the development of agricultural production
Chinese PinYin : zhāo lìng mù gǎi
make frequent changes in policies or measures
pine , bamboo and plum blossom. suì hán sā yǒu
The skill of crossing the grass. héng cǎo zhī gōng
recover one 's youthful vigour. fǎn lǎo huán tóng