make assurance doubly sure
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is sh è NSH ǐ J ì ngzh ō ng, meaning to be cautious from beginning to end. It comes from the book of rites.
Idiom explanation
Jing: be careful.
The origin of Idioms
In the book of rites, the book of records: "Confucius said: you should be careful when you start and respect when you end." Han Jiayi's new book fetal education: "Yi said:" if you correct the essence of physics, you will lose a little, and the difference will be thousands of miles, so a gentleman should be careful to start. " In the Yuan Dynasty of the spring and Autumn period, in the Guan Ju of poetry, in the crown of rites, in the heaven and earth of changes, we should be careful from beginning to end. "
Idiom usage
Examples
If you are worried and slack, you will think carefully from the beginning and respect the end. Wei Zheng, Tang Dynasty
Chinese PinYin : shèn shǐ jìng zhōng
make assurance doubly sure
Seeing without hearing. shì ér bù jiàn,tīng ér bù wén
a man should get married on coming of age. nán dà dāng hūn
break a butterfly on the wheel. niú dǐng pēng jī
Extravagance and extravagance. chǐ chǐ bù xiū