to change policy
In Chinese, Pinyin is g ǎ IXI á ng ē ngzh ā ng, which means to replace the old strings and install new ones. It refers to replacing the old, changing the system or practice, etc. It comes from the biography of Dong Zhongshu in the history of Han Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Ban Gu's biography of Dong Zhongshu in the book of Han in the Eastern Han Dynasty said, "if you steal the analogy, it will be out of tune. If you want to understand it more, you can drum it."
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym] change one's ways, turn the evil into the right, abandon the evil and follow the good
Idiom usage
It's a serial verb. It's a predicate. It's used for people. [example] Volume 7 of Ruan Kuisheng's "the Hakka talk of tea Yu" in Qing Dynasty: "no, I want officials to have the travel of scholars and gentlemen, and I want people's livelihood to be blessed, and I want them to be honest and beautiful, just as I want them to enter and close the door."
to change policy
Huang Zhong's destruction and abandonment - huáng zhōng huǐ qì,wǎ fǔ léi míng
Win without pride, lose without despair - shèng bù jiāo,bài bù něi
Honest and upright officials are hard to judge housework - qīng guān nán duàn jiā wù shì
devote oneself heart and soul to - zhuān xīn zhì zhì