Follow the rules and practice the ink
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is d à OJ à Ji à nm à, which means to obey the rules. It comes from Tang Shunzhi's book of meeting Yan JieXi in Ming Dynasty.
Idiom explanation
Idioms and words
Pinyin D ǎ OJ ǔ Ji à nmॸ
Explanation means following the rules. The same as "following the rules".
The origin of Idioms
It comes from Tang Shunzhi's book of Xianggong with Yan JieXi in Ming Dynasty: "it's like the most circuitous Chusan. It's only a small part of walking through the rules and practicing the ink, and it's not good at managing things at that time."
Chinese PinYin : dǎo jǔ jiàn mò
Follow the rules and practice the ink
follow in the steps of one 's ancestors. shéng jué zǔ wǔ
a good medicine tastes bitter. kǔ kǒu liáng yào
crane one's neck to look forward. yǐn lǐng ér wàng
plough deeply and weed thoroughly. shēn gēng yì nòu