get rid of the old to make way for the new
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is ch ú Hu ì B ù x ī n, which means to get rid of the old and get rid of the new. It comes from Emperor Guangwu Ji I of the later Han Dynasty by Yuan Hong of the Jin Dynasty.
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attributive; used of innovation
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: get rid of the old and put in the new
The origin of Idioms
Yuan Hong of Jin Dynasty wrote in the first chapter of Emperor Guangwu of the later Han Dynasty: "the person who is born of the evil spirit, or the comet, is Zhang Weifen. After that, the emperor's capital was Luoyang, where he removed the filthy cloth and created a new image. "
Idiom explanation
I'm still talking about getting rid of the old and putting in the new.
Chinese PinYin : chú huì bù xīn
get rid of the old to make way for the new
Look into the present and know the past. chá jīn zhī gǔ
accept what is wrong as right when one grows accustomed to it. xí fēi chéng shì
move in and out with wizardly elusiveness. shén lóng jiàn shǒu bù jiàn wěi
push one 's way by shoving or humping. héng chōng zhí zhuàng