Follow the rules and practice the ink
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is d à OJ à Ji à nm à, which means to obey the rules. It comes from Tang Shunzhi's book of meeting Yan JieXi in Ming Dynasty.
Idiom explanation
Idioms and words
Pinyin D ǎ OJ ǔ Ji à nmॸ
Explanation means following the rules. The same as "following the rules".
The origin of Idioms
It comes from Tang Shunzhi's book of Xianggong with Yan JieXi in Ming Dynasty: "it's like the most circuitous Chusan. It's only a small part of walking through the rules and practicing the ink, and it's not good at managing things at that time."
Follow the rules and practice the ink
not see the wood for the tress - zhī qí yī,bù zhī qí èr
go into boiling water and walk through fire and water - fù tāng dǎo huǒ
prey upon one 's country and injure the people - dù guó cán mín