strict and impartial
Qiu Wujin, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Qi ū h á ob ù f à n, which means that the military discipline is strict and does not infringe on the interests of the people. It comes from Xiang Yu's biography in historical records.
Idiom explanation
Qiuhao: the new fluff of birds and animals in autumn, which is a metaphor for very subtle things. It refers to strict military discipline and does not infringe on the interests of the people.
The origin of Idioms
Xiang Yu's biography in historical records: "when I enter the pass, I dare not be near in autumn. I'm a local official, and I'll seal the Treasury and wait for the general." "After the Han Dynasty Cen Peng biography:" holding the army in order, no offense
Idiom usage
Wang Chen was the general of the town of Kuai, who was in a state of austerity. Some of the soldiers broke the ban and held a yoke on his staff. It was said that he would take off in a hundred days. At the end of the century, there are three ways to take off: when I die, when I die, when I die, when I die, when I die, when I die, when I die, when I die, when I die, when I die. Otherwise, the arm can be folded, and it can't be changed. " So it's not a crime.
Chinese PinYin : qiū háo bù fàn
strict and impartial
eradicate harmful things and set up the business benefit of the people. chú hài xīng lì