licentious in conduct
Overstepping, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y ú Xi á nd à ngji à n, which means to behave irregularly and disobey etiquette. From the Analects of Confucius, Zi Zhang.
Notes on Idioms
Overstepping: Overstepping; leisure and inspection: rules and regulations.
The origin of Idioms
Zi Zhang, the Analects of Confucius: "great virtue does not overstep leisure, but small virtue goes out to enter."
Idiom usage
A person's character. Example Locke Kant's theory of freedom of will is similar to the theory of excess. In Liang Qichao's on the merits and demerits of religion and philosophers and the biography of Dai Kui in the book of Jin in Qing Dynasty, it is said that "those who go to fame of Taoism want to be faithful and lose their roots, but they also go beyond examination."
Chinese PinYin : yú xián dàng jiǎn
licentious in conduct
about some insignificant matters. zhēng cháng jìng duǎn
restrict sb . 's activities to a designated area or sphere. huà dì wéi yù
Killing horses and destroying cars. shā mǎ huǐ chē
learn local practices and customs. cǎi fēng wèn sú