seize the reins and bring about peace -- to have a great ambition to bring about peace in the country at one 's first appointment
In Chinese, Pinyin is l ǎ NP è ICH é ngq ī ng, which means the ambition to innovate politics and clarify the world. It also means that people are determined to innovate and do a good job when they are in charge of a job. It comes from the biography of fan Pang in the later Han Dynasty.
Idiom explanation
To grasp the bridle: to hold the reins of the horse; to clarify: to govern the world peacefully.
The origin of Idioms
Fan Pang's biography in the book of the later Han Dynasty: "Pang boarded the car to catch the bridle, but he had the ambition to clarify the world."
Idiom usage
In conjunction with; as a predicate. When the youth is tired, he should hold back his hand. In Qing Dynasty, Gong Zizhen's Miscellaneous Poems of Jihai and song Liuyong's one inch of gold: fighting the Han Festival, seeking the emperor's honor, covering the Marquis's career, and being a literary man. "The moon on the West River" by Chen Li of the Yuan Dynasty. The first call should be broadcast in Wuyang city. With awe inspiring respect. Outside the nunnery, flowers are scattered and jade is broken. It's not in bingjunheng to urge them to return. It's not only moving public poetry. as soon as the manager takes office, he shows his ambition and has the ambition to clarify.
Chinese PinYin : lǎn pèi chéng qīng
seize the reins and bring about peace -- to have a great ambition to bring about peace in the country at one 's first appointment
Drinking water and eating vegetables. yǐn shuǐ shí shū
one's blood boils with indignation. rè xuè fèi téng
A thousand gold for war, a hundred gold for space. qiān jīn yòng bīng,bǎi jīn qiú jiàn
great talent and bold vision. xióng cái dà lüè