follow the tracks of an overthrown chariot -- follow the same old disastrous road
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is d ǎ OQ ì f ù zh é, which means not to accept a lesson and repeat the mistakes made by others. It comes from the biography of Jia Yi in Hanshu.
The word head follows the same path pronunciation D ǎ OQ ì f ù zh é. Take the road that someone else overturns. It is a metaphor for not accepting a lesson and repeating the mistakes made by others. It comes from the biography of Jia Yi in Hanshu written by Ban Gu in the Eastern Han Dynasty: "the front car covers, the back car admonishes." in fact, I hate the founding brothers Wang because I read the copy of mustard seed garden. Letters to Zheng Zhengduo by Lu Xun
follow the tracks of an overthrown chariot -- follow the same old disastrous road
congratulate each other by raising the hand to the brow - é shǒu chēng sòng
sit idle and eat , and in time one 's whole fortune will be used up - zuò chī shān bēng
Showing virtue and violating the law - zhāo dé sè wéi
to be able to shoulder important tasks - fù zhòng zhì yuǎn