It's getting worse
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Xi à oy ú Chu í Hu à, which means to praise the local officials for their good education. It comes from Lu's spring and Autumn Annals.
Idiom explanation
It is used to praise local officials for their good education.
The origin of Idioms
According to Lu's spring and Autumn Annals, in the spring and Autumn period, Confucius disciple Mi Zijian Zhifu (now Shanxian County, Shandong Province) was a sage. In three years, night fishermen were able to return the fish to the water.
Analysis of Idioms
Compact type
Xiaoyu Chuihua
[rhyme words] filling the box, condescending, starving to death is small, dishonesty is big, Jiuyuan is small, hairpin is distributed, depending on others, men and women are married, death is good at the world, catharsis is big, for small nuisance big lead
Idiom story
In the spring and Autumn period, mizijian served as a local official in his father. Three years later, Wuma Qi went to visit his father in Weifu. When he saw a fisherman fishing at night and threw the fish back into the river, he asked him curiously why he wanted to do this. The fisherman came back and said that mizijian did not allow people to catch small fish. Wu Ma Qi went back to Confucius and said that the education of MI Zi Jian was in place, and people consciously followed it.
Idiom usage
Used as an object or attribute; used in writing.
Examples
The husband does not call the eggs, the common people do not count the nets, they sing on the reeds, and the fish are dying, so they love each other. A collection of Arts and culture volume 2-1 quoted the theory of human nature by he Chengtian in the Southern Song Dynasty
Chinese PinYin : xiāo yú chuí huà
It's getting worse
The sea is boiling with each other. hǎi nèi dǐng fèi
so far behind that one can only see the dust of the rider ahead. wàng chén mò jí
dispel chaos and restore peace. bō luàn fǎn zhì