separate regime
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is g ē J ù y ī f ā ng, which means to seize an area by force and oppose the central government, also known as "each dominating one side". From the ancient and modern novels, Lin'an Li Qian puliu made a fortune.
The origin of Idioms
Feng Menglong of the Ming Dynasty wrote in his ancient and modern novels: Qian puliu's fortune in Lin'an: "nowadays, the government is reversed, eunuchs exercise power, and the authority of the officials is not good. All the heroes in the world have a sense of secession."
Idiom usage
It can be used as predicate, object, attribute, etc. Mao Dun's correspondence about Li Zicheng, a novel: "Xianzhong, on the other hand, is a little bit lower. At most, he can only take advantage of the disturbance of the world and separate himself."
Chinese PinYin : gē jù yī fāng
separate regime
it happens that there is a similar case. wú dú yǒu ǒu
venomous serpents and wild beasts. dú shé měng shòu
The white head returned in vain. bái shǒu kōng guī
to have an irascible temperament. cuō yán rù huǒ