by military rules
Military law, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is j ū NF ǎ C ó ngsh ì, meaning severe punishment. It comes from the biography of Wang Mang in the history of Han Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
"Wang Mang Zhuan of the Han Dynasty:" dare to break the law while pouring, often engage in military law. "
Idiom usage
According to Chen Shou's the chronicles of the Three Kingdoms, the biography of sun Po Lu's fighting for rebellion, the Western Jin Dynasty: "the governor of Nanyang stopped the righteous soldiers and made the thieves fight from time to time. Please accept the case and engage in military justice." "Er Ke Pai an amazement" volume two one: "recruit the same situation, that is to engage in military law, immediately Xiaoshou." Chapter 15 of Li Baojia's the appearance of officialdom in the Qing Dynasty: fearing that illegal brave men would harass the people, he told the county in person: if there is any case mentioned in the preceding paragraph and the evidence is conclusive, he is allowed to go to the county to charge. After the trial, they will be engaged in military law and will never be lenient. Chapter 40 of Gao Yunlan's spring and Autumn Annals of a small city: Wu Qi replied solemnly, "if you can't deliver the ship in three days, please engage in military justice."
Analysis of Idioms
Act according to law and punish according to law
Chinese PinYin : jūn fǎ cóng shì
by military rules
if the blind leads the blind , both shall fall into the ditch. máng rén xiā mǎ
a wealthy , influential but modest person. chí yíng bǎo tài
the sun is sinking in the west. rì bó xī shān
make up a deficiency by the surplus. jué cháng jì duǎn
the writer 's sincerity shines through his words. qíng xiàn hū cí