go on in the same old way
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is d ǎ och á NGX í g ù, which means to follow the old rules. It comes from the description of Jiao's pen and Book of history.
Idiom explanation
Dance: step, follow; attack: firm attack, inherit; often, therefore: habitual, old.
The origin of Idioms
Jiao Hong of the Ming Dynasty wrote in the book of the chronicles of Jiao's writing: "scholars have gone through all kinds of things, but they can't find any more."
Idiom usage
It has a derogatory meaning. The preface to Zhang Xinyou's poems written by Huang Zongxi in Qing Dynasty: "it's not the case that it's full of its muscle and its spirit, so we should distinguish its true and false ears. In Su Shi's Yi Yin Lun of Song Dynasty, "the later gentleman, who is always on the way to the world, is eager to be broad-minded.
Chinese PinYin : dǎo cháng xí gù
go on in the same old way
there is always a fair public opinion. zì yǒu gōng lùn
On the knowledge of the world. lùn shì zhī rén
like nature itself -- highest quality. hún rán tiān chéng
be fond of eating and averse to work. hào chī lǎn zuò