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Fanjingxingquan, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is f ǎ NJ ī NGX í ngqu á n, which means breaking the rules and taking expedient measures. It comes from the biography of Gongyang, the 11th year of Duke Huan.
The origin of Idioms
"The eleventh year of Duke Huan" in the biography of Gongyang: "who is in power? Those who have power are contrary to scriptures, and then there are those who are good. " According to the preface of Taishigong in Shiji: "zhulv was the follower, trying to weaken the capital, while the powerful and rebellious Jing was in power."
Idiom explanation
Scripture: common way; power: expedient way. It means breaking the rules and taking expedient measures.
Idiom usage
It refers to the adoption of flexible means. Now I'm living thousands of miles away, so I have to be alone. I'll marry my wife one day and send him back. (Ling Mengchu, Ming Dynasty, Volume 32)
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: the right to comply with the Confucian classics and the right to combine the Confucian classics
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wrinkled skin and white hair -- advanced in age - jī pí hè fà
drift about without any definite trace like running water or duckweed - gěng jì píng zōng
extort excessive taxes and levies - hèng zhēng kē liǎn