Rules and regulations
The Chinese idiom, CH á ozh ā nggu ó di ǎ n in pinyin, means the rules and regulations of the court and the state. From the book of Sui, biography of Niu Hong.
The origin of Idioms
"Sui Shu · Niu Hong Zhuan": Xun Xu, the Secretary of Jin Dynasty, wrote the Internal Classic of Wei Dynasty and the new book. Although there are still some defects in the old bamboo slips, there are a lot of Jiuji in the new chapter, which is enough to teach the world. It belonged to the mausoleum of Liu and Shiping. The capital was destroyed and the imperial code was lost. "
Idiom explanation
The system of the imperial court and the state. It's the same as "chaozhang Guogu".
Chinese PinYin : cháo zhāng guó diǎn
Rules and regulations
sit idle and eat , and in time one 's whole fortune will be used up. zuò chī shān bēng
inherit and qualify for his father 's career. gàn fù zhī gǔ
there is an exchange of calls. yǒu lái yǒu wǎng
established by the people through long social practice. yuè dìng sú chéng
make a personal example as an effective means of convincing others. xiàn shēn shuō fǎ