Lavish rewards
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is h è ng à NL à NSH à ng, which means a reward that does not meet the regulations. It comes from the epitaph of Liu Gongmu, the direct scholar of baomoge.
The origin of Idioms
Ye Shi of the Song Dynasty wrote in the epitaph of Liu Gongmu, the direct scholar of baomoge: "redundant soldiers and redundant officials should be reduced; excessive rewards should not be given at any time."
Idiom usage
Used as an object or attribute; used in writing.
Chinese PinYin : hèng ēn làn shǎng
Lavish rewards
bureaucrats shield one another. guān guān xiāng wèi
be near to worthies and keep away from mean fellows. qīn xián yuǎn nìng
far away and not within the foreseeable future. yáo yáo wú qī
a house can 't have two masters. jiā wú èr zhǔ