Double gauge
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is di é J ǔǔ ch ó nggu ī, which means that rules and rules are overlapped, moment and moment are overlapped, and the degree is the same. The original metaphor is that the movement and the static are in accordance with the law or up and down, and the latter describes imitation and repetition. It comes from the history of the Three Kingdoms, Shu Shu and Ying Zheng Zhuan.
The origin of Idioms
In the history of the Three Kingdoms, Shu Shu and Ying zhengzhuan, it is said that "the monarch and his officials are united in the court, and Li Shu is happy to wear them in the wild. They move like rules, and they are quiet like moments."
Idiom usage
Because of the teacher's words, to read the book of the teacher, such as repeated rules and regulations, without losing the slightest, bright and talented person's pen, separate and go their separate ways. Ji Yun's notes on Yuewei thatched cottage
Chinese PinYin : dié jǔ chóng guī
Double gauge
be worth reading a hundred times. bǎi dú bù yàn
shed floods down one's cheeks.. lèi rú yǔ xià
know and observe all but stay obscure. zhī bái shǒu hēi