be a law onto oneself
Arbitrary, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is d ú Du à nzhu à nx í ng, refers to act arbitrarily, make a decision alone and carry it out without considering other people's opinions. Also refers to their own solitary, arbitrary behavior. From Cao Ming's riding the wind and breaking the waves.
Idiom usage
It is used as an object, attributive, adverbial, derogatory and undemocratic style. He usually doesn't talk about democracy, and he often does things.
The origin of Idioms
Cao Ming's "riding the wind and breaking the waves" 9: "it seems that she can't see his remarkable achievements at all, but reminds him all the time not to be proud or arbitrary."
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym] arbitrary, headstrong, domineering and [antonym] brainstorming
be a law onto oneself
cutting into the present-day evils - qiè zhòng shí bì
as difficult as to climb up to the sky - nán rú dēng tiān
to live in complacency on barely sufficient or insecure means - tōu ān dàn xī