A broom and a hoe
Zhuozhu is a Chinese idiom. Its pinyin is Su ì zh ǒ UD é ch ú, which means that customs are corrupt and not benevolent. It's from Han Jiayi's policing.
Idiom usage
As an object or attribute, it refers to corrupting customs
Examples
The house is divided into two parts.
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: to break the customs
The origin of Idioms
Han Jiayi's "public security policy" says: "if you borrow your father's hoe, you will have virtue; if you take your mother's broom, you will speak."
Idiom explanation
It's used to describe bad customs and lack of benevolence.
Chinese PinYin : suì zhǒu dé chú
A broom and a hoe
not swayed by personal considerations. bù xún sī qíng
revert to one 's former state. jiù niàn fù máng