inconstant in policy
Chaolingxigai is a Chinese idiom with the pronunciation of zh ā ol ì NGX ī g ǎ I, which is used for policy change. Orders issued in the morning are changed in the evening. It describes the fact that government decrees are changed from time to time, so that people do not know what to do. It comes from Lun GUI Su Shu.
Analysis of Idioms
The opposite is the same as before
The origin of Idioms
In Chao CuO's treatise on GUI Su Shu of Han Dynasty, "Fu was collected from time to time, but changed in the morning and evening." In the history of Han Dynasty, Shi Huo Zhi 1: "the government was in a state of emergency and tyranny, the Fu was collected from time to time, and it was changed in the morning and in the evening."
Idiom usage
It can be used as predicate, attributive, complement and clause; it can be used for policy change. Example 1. In Tang Yuanzhen's system of conferring the commander in chief of Ma's Academy, the Minister of the Ministry of punishment, the governor of the Tianping army, it is said that "the difficulty of welcoming the new and sending off the old and the trouble of changing orders all the time is not the result of action." 2. Fan Zuyu of the Song Dynasty wrote in the book of emperor Mu Zong, Volume 19 of the Tang Dynasty: "all the anti military actions were based on the general plan of self-restraint. They changed their orders day by day, and they didn't know what to follow. (3) biography of Liu Jian in Ming History Volume 181: the imperial edict to ascend the throne extended the neck of the world, but the order of the day changed constantly, so far there was no peaceful day. 4. Policies should be relatively stable and should not be changed.
inconstant in policy
to breed calamity for the future - zòng hǔ guī shān
when the dawn is breaking , and i cannot sleep - míng fā bù mèi
restrain vicious and foster sincere habits - xián xié cún chéng
Practice the soil and eat the hair - jiàn tǔ shí máo