be guilty of dereliction or serious violation of law
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Hu à if à Lu à NJ à, which means breaking the law and discipline. From the book of rites · Liyun written by Dai Sheng in the Western Han Dynasty.
Idiom explanation
Breaking the rule of law and discipline.
The origin of Idioms
In the book of rites and Li Yun written by Dai Sheng in the Western Han Dynasty, "therefore, the emperor is suitable for the princes, and he must give up his ancestral temple instead of entering it by ceremony, which means that the emperor disobeys the law and discipline."
Analysis of Idioms
Break the law and discipline. antonym: abide by the law.
Idiom usage
Break the law and discipline. examples bad laws and regulations came from the dynasty, and the history books were written in the spring and Autumn period. In Qing Dynasty, Zhang pengdan's classic history, Dharma and caution poems.
Chinese PinYin : huài fǎ luàn jì
be guilty of dereliction or serious violation of law
holding a high official post , governing many places and possessing enormous wealth. nán miàn bǎi chéng
The apes cry and the cranes complain. yuán tí hè yuàn
be frightened out of one's wits. xīn dǎn jù liè