instructions from one 's father
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Gu ò t í ngzh ī x ù n, which means to refer to father's instruction. From the Analects of Confucius Ji Shi.
The origin of Idioms
Ji Shi in the Analects of Confucius: "to taste independence, the carp will tend to pass the court. He said, "do you study poetry?" He said to them, "it's not true." "If you don't learn poetry, you can't speak." The carp retreated to learn poetry
Idiom usage
As an object, it refers to my father's instruction, which means that I have been taught by my father to take over the family's career, so that I can take over the crown and become a scholar official. In the book of Jin, biography of Xiahou Zhan, and in the stele of Zhangxuan ancestral hall, a county official, by Cai Yong of Han Dynasty, it is said that "you sun fan, with the quality of being loyal and solid, should receive the instructions from the court."
Chinese PinYin : guò tíng zhī xùn
instructions from one 's father
The mountain is high and the emperor is far away. shān gāo huáng dì yuǎn