Crack the crown and destroy the crown
It is an idiom to split the crown and destroy the crown. The Pinyin is Li è Gu ā nhu ǐ mi ǎ n, B á B ě ns ā iyu á n, which originally refers to the feudal lords' abandonment of etiquette and law and invasion of the emperor's direct territory. Later, it was used as a substitute for his subordinates to overthrow the monarch and seize the throne.
Li è Gu ā nhu ǐ mi ǎ n, B á B ě ns ā iyu á n. The original metaphor is that the princes betray the etiquette and law and invade the direct territory of the emperor. Later, it was used as a substitute for his subordinates to overthrow the monarch and seize the throne. [source] in the ninth year of Zhaogong, Zuo Zhuan: "if my uncle split his crown and destroyed his crown, he would pull out his roots and abandon his master. Although he was in the army, how could he be more than one?" [example] in the case of Guiyang, the masses are defeated, the nine cauldrons are asked lightly, the crowns are cracked and the crowns are destroyed. In the book of the Southern Qi Dynasty, Gao Di Ji is used as predicate and attributive
Chinese PinYin : liè guān huǐ miǎn,bá běn sāi yuán
Crack the crown and destroy the crown
pressing the foot and whispering in the ear -- telling a secret. niè zú fù ěr
envy sb . better or abler than oneself. dù xián jí néng
green tiles and crimson roofs. zhū méng bì wǎ
To hide the truth from the sky. mèi dì mán tiān
words benefit universal benevolence. rén yán lì bó
with the force of thunder and lightning. qū léi chè diàn
follow suit without knowing why. ǎi rén kàn chǎng
Everyone will be punished if he gets it. rén rén dé ér zhū zhī