the sacred rules of the religious order
Rules and regulations, Chinese idioms, Pinyin is Q ī nggu ī Ji è L ǜ, originally refers to the rules and commandments observed by Buddhists. This is a metaphor for the cumbersome and unreasonable rules and regulations that bind people. From Shimen Zhengtong.
The origin of Idioms
"Shimen Zhengtong" says: "the Zen master Huaihai of Baizhang mountain began to establish the rules of Zen in the world, which is called Qinggui."
Idiom usage
Combined; as subject and object; with derogatory meaning.
Examples
There are many old teachers and students are afraid of him.
2. There should be necessary rules and regulations -- Mao Zedong
Chinese PinYin : qīng guī jiè lǜ
the sacred rules of the religious order
The speaker is earnest, the listener is contemptuous. yán zhě zhūn zhūn,tīng zhě miǎo miǎo
infer the whole matter after hearing but one point. wén yī zhī èr
A trickle of water makes a river. juān dī chéng hé
the time and fates are against someone. yùn jiǎn shí guāi