Be strict with the world
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is Ji ǎ OSH ì L ì s ú, which means to change decadent social customs and encourage honest folk customs. It comes from the list of Lin's first tomb in Putian.
The origin of Idioms
Tang Shunzhi of the Ming Dynasty wrote in the list of Lin's first tombs in Putian: "the journey of being upright and upright in the world, donating private money to the public, and cleaning up the cliff can not be blamed for hating the ghosts and gods, but it can be blamed for hating the people."
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate, attribute, or object; used in writing. Example: in Song Dynasty, Wang Yucheng's Si Hao Temple stele: "far harm the whole body, correct the world and encourage the common people, clear the spring and wash the ears, and fill the stomach with purple Ganoderma lucidum." It is also called "being upright in the world".
Be strict with the world
modify the heaven and change the sun - yí tiān xǐ rì
bestow high praise on sb.'s literary works - jī suì tuò hú