Take the root
The Chinese idiom, Pinyin Du ā Nb ě nzh è ngyu á n, means to rectify fundamentally. It comes from the biography of Yin Zhongkan in the book of Jin.
Idiom explanation
End: upright, clean. Ben: not at all. Source: source.
The origin of Idioms
According to the biography of Yin Zhongkan in the book of Jin, "those who are upright and upright can not be without danger, but the danger is easy to hold."
Idiom usage
As predicate, object and attribute, it refers to governing fundamentally.
Chinese PinYin : duān běn zhèng yuán
Take the root
lead a life of luxury and debauchery. huāng yín wú chǐ
our fox-furs are frayed and worn. hú qiú méng róng