Take orders
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is sh ù sh ē NSH ò um ì ng, which means to refer to surrender. It refers to obeying orders after surrendering to the past. It comes from Huainanzi · human training.
Idiom explanation
Binding: self restraint, not indulgence. It's a metaphor for surrender. It refers to obeying orders after surrendering to the past.
The origin of Idioms
"Huainanzi · human training" says: "when Wei Jun came, half of the state of Wei said:" it's not like the dynasty was in Jin Dynasty. " Half of them said, "it's not like the dynasty was in Wu." However, Wei Jun thought that Wu could return to the skeleton, so he tied himself up to receive orders. "
Chinese PinYin : shù shēn shòu mìng
Take orders
rat 's liver and insect 's legs. shǔ gān chóng bì
to be in deep anxiety day seems like a year. dù rì rú suì
agree without prior without previous consultation. bù móu ér tóng
The autumn wind sweeps the fallen leaves. qiū fēng sǎo luò yè