receive orders respectfully
The Chinese idiom, f è NGM ì NGW é ij ǐ n in pinyin, means to follow orders strictly and dare not violate them. It comes from the inscription on the inscriptions of Xiankao to Shaofu.
Idiom explanation
To act in strict accordance with orders and dare not violate them.
Idioms and allusions
Li Dongyang of the Ming Dynasty wrote in the inscription on the inscription of Gaoming, a gift to the emperor of Shaofu, that "Dongyang is all obedient to his orders."
Discrimination of words
Words with the same rhyme: flowers cover the willow, the rabbit lacks the black Shen, surging, beating the bed and clapping the pillow, people are poor and rebellious, complicated and well quoted, chasing the last to abandon the original, wild goose breaks the fish Shen, Fu Yishen, Shibi Jiushi
Idiom usage
Li Si, Xia Wuji and the chief guard all obeyed orders. The third act of Gao Jianli by Guo Moruo
receive orders respectfully
dwell in caves and live in groups - qún jū xué chǔ
It's easy to hide an open gun, but hard to defend a hidden one - míng qiāng hǎo duǒ,àn jiàn nán fáng