violate rules and overstep all bounds
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is d à ngji à NY ú Xi á n, which means to describe debauchery and disobedience. From the Analects of Confucius, Zi Zhang.
Idiom explanation
Dang: destruction. Check: constraints. Excess: transcendence; Leisure: moderation.
The origin of Idioms
Zi Zhang, the Analects of Confucius: "great virtue does not surpass the head, but small virtue goes in and out."
Idiom usage
It's a combination, a predicate, and a description of debauchery. He was forced into the room and curtain, where he had no interest and was full of thorns, so he could not help sleeping outside. (Chapter 27 of the biography of heroes and heroines by Wen Kang in Qing Dynasty) and biography of Dai Kui in Jin Dynasty: "those who go to fame by Taoism want to be honest and honest, but they have to go beyond the examination." Feng Guifen of Qing Dynasty wrote in Shanghai guoyutang record: "it's unavoidable to be hungry and cold, but I don't know the reason and meaning, and I do things in a leisurely way." Xu Nianci's view on Yu Zhi's Novels: "the books of amorous feelings are connected with morality. If they are not upright, then It's a shame to be honest and clean. " In Li Dazhao's min Yi and politics, he said, "if you don't want to be forced by human beings, you can help people and common people to be in charge of things And if you accept justice, you will never be in danger of going out of your way. " Also known as "wandering".
Chinese PinYin : dàng jiǎn yú xián
violate rules and overstep all bounds
help intensify the strength of billows and waves. tuī bō zhù lán
summon up one 's courage for a task. chuō lì fèn fā
To nourish oneself is to injure one's health. yǐ yǎng shāng shēn