mend one's ways
Abandoning evil and returning to the right is a Chinese word,
The Pinyin is: Q ì Xi é Gu ī zh è ng,
No longer do bad things, go on the right road.
Entry
mend one's ways
Pinyin
qìxiéguīzhèng
Citation explanation
Stop doing bad things and get on the right path.
The ninety first chapter of Shi Naian's the complete story of the water margin in the Ming Dynasty: "the general abandoned the evil and returned to the right. He was equal to song and contributed to the country. The imperial court should attach importance to him."
Chapter 107 of the outlaws of the Marsh: "Lu Junyi comforted and advised Lao, and ordered Wushun town to guard the city. Therefore, the thieves and generals all felt weeping, showed their courage, and abandoned the evil to the right."
Niu Xiu of Qing Dynasty wrote "the righteous martyrs of Shu family:" today, the Duke has abandoned the evil and returned to the right, and inherited the king's seal. "
Lu Xun's an open letter in response to Mr. Yang Cunren's open letter in the collection of southern and Northern tunes: "it's called 'abandoning evil and returning to the right', scolding 'bandits' and killing fellow people. It's also very fierce."
usage
It is used as predicate and attributive with commendatory meaning. To guide people to the right way
Chinese PinYin : qì xié guī zhèng
mend one's ways