Rules and rules
Chi Zhu Wu Fu, a Chinese idiom, is ch ǐ zh ú w ǔ f ú in pinyin. It originally refers to the books recording military orders and military achievements, and the rules of mutual guarantee among the soldiers. It also refers to the army. It comes from the preface to the manuscript of Shuyi mountain.
The origin of Idioms
Fang Xiaoru of the Ming Dynasty wrote a preface to the manuscript of Shuyi mountain: "I look at Mr. Jiang of the four Ming Dynasties. He lived thousands of miles away. He wrote poems in his hand Those who taste his words as plain as they are, have never been withered, cold and astringent. Is it an Ke who is called a poor man? "
Idiom usage
Used as an object or attribute; used in writing.
Chinese PinYin : chǐ zhú wǔ fú
Rules and rules
cut off from the long to add to the short. póu duō yì guǎ
Be meticulous in speech and smile. yán xiào bù gǒu
build bridges across the rivers. yù shuǐ jià qiáo