Follow the precepts of frost
Walking on frost, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is l ǚ Shu ā ngzhi ī Ji è, which means walking on the frost and knowing that the time of ice is coming. It means seeing the signs in front of you and being alert to the future. It's from Qiao xiang Xiao Ji by he Xiu in Qing Dynasty.
explain
Walk on the frost and know that the time of freezing is coming. It means to be alert to the future while seeing the signs in front of you.
Source of allusion
"I · Kun" says: "it's hard to walk on frost." Li e, Qing Dynasty, wrote in the east city miscellany Yuyuan: "although you are worried about falling into the sky, how dare you forget to walk on the frost?"
Discrimination of words
Idiom structure: partial formal time: modern time
Chinese PinYin : lǚ shuāng zhī jiè
Follow the precepts of frost