come over and pledge allegiance
The pronunciation is sh ù sh ē NZ ì 224; I, which is a Chinese idiom. It means to restrain oneself from going along with bad people and bad things. From Chen Tianhua's on the history of Chinese revolution in Qing Dynasty.
Idiom explanation
He said that he would be self-improvement. It means to restrain oneself from going along with bad people and bad things.
Idioms and allusions
source:
The first chapter of Chen Tianhua's on the history of Chinese revolution in the Qing Dynasty: "those who love themselves a little, dare not escape from the normal track and be punished by the Qing history."
Example:
When you study in University, you should be able to ~. Cai Yuanpei's speech on becoming president of Peking University
Discrimination of words
Synonym: clean and self-improvement
Antonym: go together
Usage: used as predicate and object
Chinese PinYin : shù shēn zì ài
come over and pledge allegiance
fly one 's falcons and course one 's hounds. fēi yīng bēn quǎn
One son becomes a monk and nine ancestors ascend to heaven. yī zǐ chū jiā,jiǔ zǔ shēng tiān
wet by the rain and burnt by the sun. yǔ lín rì zhì
give one 's whole attention in. quán shén guān zhù
successive distresses as caused by continual wars. bīng lián huò jiē