It's a common practice
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is "NCH á NGX í g ù", which means to be content with the routine and get used to the old rules. It describes doing things according to conventions and conventions, being conservative and not thinking about change. From on talent.
The origin of Idioms
Liu Qi, Song Dynasty, wrote in his book on Talents: "there is a theory that people are willing to do nothing in a peaceful way, and there is a theory that people are more willing to do things than dare to do things."
Discrimination of words
Synonyms: be conservative, stick to the rules, follow the rules, and follow the rules; Antonyms: push through the old to bring forth the new, be flexible, and be old and new
Idiom usage
He is a person who follows the rules and doesn't want to change. Wei Yuan's Zhi Pian Qi in Qing Dynasty
It's a common practice
throw away everything when fleeing - diū kuī xiè jiǎ
A thousand year old crane returns home - qiān suì hè guī
wear a sad face a long face with knitted eyebrows - jiāo méi kǔ liǎn
Chapter eight of right biography - yòu chuán zhī bā zhāng