properly and logically arranged
In Chinese idioms, Pinyin is y ǒ UTI á oy ǒ UL ǐ, which means to describe the level and context clearly. It comes from the book of Shang, the first chapter of Pan Geng.
The origin of Idioms
"If the net is in the outline, it will be orderly and orderly," says the book of history, pan gengshang Kong Anguo biography: "if the net in the program, each has its own order but not chaos."
Idiom usage
Combined; used as attribute, adverbial, complement; with commendatory meaning. His innocent speech, concise wording and well-organized thinking are really worthy of his reputation. Guo Moruo's the spring and Autumn period of revolution, the sequel to the ten years of creation, and Lao She's the second paragraph 5 of Er Ma: "Mrs. Wendu has been busy all morning, and she has tidied up the three rooms upstairs in order." Xia Mianzun and Ye Shengtao's "Wen Xin" Four: "you think it's orderly to write what you said in one section." Shu Wei's "good man field papaya" says, "this young man has been working hard, but he is methodical and never makes mistakes."
Idiom story
During the Shang Dynasty, the capital of the country was on the North Bank of the Yellow River and often suffered from floods. In order to avoid floods and let the people live and work in peace and contentment, pan Geng, the ninth generation grandson of Shangtang, decided to move his capital to Yindi, south of the yellow river. The nobles were worried that the move would cause social unrest. Pan Geng said that as long as he obeyed his orders, he would move his capital to Yindi in an orderly way.
Chinese PinYin : yǒu tiáo yǒu lǐ
properly and logically arranged
be hard to refuse for the sake of friendship. qíng miàn nán què
A collection of flies and ants. yǐ fù yíng jí
talk of everything under the sun. tán tiān shuō dì
dogs and chickens made of potter 's clay. táo quǎn wǎ jī
Do not trample on cattle and sheep. niú yáng wù jiàn