be guilty of dereliction or serious violation of law
Violation of law and discipline, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is w é if à Lu à NJ à, which means violation of law and discipline. It comes from the first biography of Yuan Shao and Liu Biao in the book of the later Han Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
According to the first biography of Yuan Shao and Liu Biao in the book of the later Han Dynasty, "he set his mind to specialize in the field, to rob the provincial government, to humiliate Wang Liao, to violate the law and discipline, to summon three platforms, and to autocratic the government."
Idiom usage
He Shi; as predicate and attributive; with derogatory meaning. In Deng Xiaoping's "overcoming the current unhealthy tendencies within the southwest party," he said, "in addition, he will do things that violate the common program and policies, violate the law and discipline, and make himself completely unreasonable and passive." "There is no doubt that this is a real case of deceiving the superior and deceiving the inferior and violating the law and discipline."
Chinese PinYin : wéi fǎ luàn jì
be guilty of dereliction or serious violation of law
content is no more important than diction. lǐ bù shèng cí
sit down and share the plunder. zuò dì fēn zāng
have an extensive knowledge and a wide experience. bó wù qià wén
four positions : walking , standing , sitting , lying down. xíng zhù zuò wò
refuse to realize one 's error. zhí mí bù xǐng
stamp one 's feet and beat one 's breast. dùn zú chuí xiōng