take relative measures to solve a problem
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Du ì zh è ngzh ī y à o, which means the medicine for the root cause of the disease. It refers to the corresponding method used to correct the shortcomings and mistakes. It comes from the biography of Hua Tuo in the annals of the Three Kingdoms.
The origin of Idioms
According to the biography of Hua Tuo, Wei Zhi, the chronicles of the Three Kingdoms, "the officials Ni Xun and Li Yan had a headache and a hot body, and their sufferings were the same. Tuo said, "when you look for the present, you should sweat." In spite of the difference, Tuo said, "it's better to seek the external solid and extend the internal solid, so it's better to treat it differently." That is to say, each of them should be combined with medicine, and Ming and Dan should start at the same time. "
Idiom usage
I can't use it in the end, but the world is gone. Then I know what my teacher said is the right medicine for Siling. Huang Zongxi's Zi Liu Zi Xing Ju Xia in Qing Dynasty
take relative measures to solve a problem
a pleasant night cow coupled with a fine landscape - liáng xiāo měi jǐng
be jealous of the good and envious of the strong - jí xián dù néng
be endowed with both beauty and talent - cái mào jiān quán
laws handed down from forefathers - zǔ zōng jiā fǎ
this matter should not be delayed - shì bù yí chí