regulate the family and rule the state
Qi Jia Zhi Guo, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Q í Ji ā zh ì Gu ó, which means to govern the family and the country. From the book of rites · University.
Idiom usage
The first part of Prince yuan's a slip into the Peach Garden: "you and I stay in the dark in the old mountains. We are as strong as a family and a country." In Ming Dynasty, Feng Weimin's divertimento of "changing the official's position and thanking the benefactor" said: "the history of shishuzi is poor and abstruse, the father and son of monarch and minister are all loyal and filial, and they are well versed in governing the country."
The origin of Idioms
"The book of rites · University" says: "the so-called rule of state must first Qi his family, his family can not be taught, but can teach people, No. So a gentleman does not become a monk, but becomes a teacher in the country. "
Chinese PinYin : qí jiā zhì guó
regulate the family and rule the state
resort to stopgap measure detrimental to one 's long-term interest. wān ròu yī chuāng
harm others without benefiting oneself. sǔn rén bù lì jǐ