falling of ceremony
The Chinese idiom, Pinyin is l ǐ B ē ngyu è Hu à I. It means that the rules and regulations of feudal ethics were greatly damaged. From the book of living with bamboo slips.
The origin of Idioms
Zhang Binglin's book of living with bamboo slips in the Qing Dynasty: "since the middle Tang Dynasty, rites have been broken and music has been broken, and there have been some crazy and cunning works. They have made their own rules, but things are not ancient."
Idiom usage
Combined; as object and attribute; with derogatory meaning
Idioms and allusions
In the Analects of Confucius, Yang Huo "three years of mourning has been a long time. If a gentleman is not polite for three years, the etiquette will be bad; if he is not happy for three years, the music will collapse. " interpretation: it refers to the great destruction of the feudal rules and regulations in the Zhou Dynasty, implying that the social system and cultural order suffered major changes, which needed to be improved by those who were saints inside and kings outside. In ancient China, propriety was a social system and moral standard. Actually, in the Western Zhou Dynasty, Wu Zhu culture went bankrupt. Before the Western Zhou Dynasty, it was no more prosperous than the spring and Autumn period, but Confucius could not bear it
Chinese PinYin : lǐ bēng yuè huài
falling of ceremony
remove mountains and drain seas. yí shān zào hǎi
Scenic Spots and Historical Sites. míng shèng gǔ jī