Get on the bus
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is l ǎ NP è ID ē ngch ē, which means patrolling around to supervise the administration of officials. It comes from Chen Zi'ang's three articles on the interests of the military and the state: envoys.
The origin of Idioms
Chen Zi'ang's "three articles on the interests of the army and the State - envoys" in the Tang Dynasty: "first from the capital, and then visit jackals, and then get on the car, in order to clear the world."
Idiom usage
To inspect the administration of local officials
Examples
Chen Zhongju (Chen Fan) said that he was a scholar, behaved in a world-class way, got on the car and got on the bridle (P è I), and had the ambition to clarify the world. New sayings of the world
The husband's entry into the world is very elegant, and he is very angry! A poem by Mao Qiling in Qing Dynasty
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms: to clarify, to understand, to understand the Central Plains
Chinese PinYin : lǎn pèi dēng chē
Get on the bus
fearful with a guilty conscience. huái zhe guǐ tāi
gorgeously wrought -- colourfully and dazzlingly embellished. cuò cǎi lòu jīn
you cannot afford to incur public wrath. zhòng nù nán rèn
the heavenly maids scatter blossoms. tiān nǚ sàn huā