golden rule and precious precept
Golden rules, Chinese idioms, Pinyin is j ī NK ē y ù L ǜ, the original description of the perfect provisions of the statute. It is a creed that must be observed and cannot be changed. It comes from the drama Qin Meixin by Yang Xiong of Han Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Yang Xiong's drama Qin Meixin in Han Dynasty: "the law is good, the quantity is good, the golden rule is good."
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym]: rules and regulations, golden words, irrefutable
Idiom usage
It's a combination; it's predicate and object; it's commendatory. He regarded the ridiculous rules of his family as sages. The 13th chapter of light on the wrong road by Li Lvyuan in Qing Dynasty
Idiom explanation
The original law describes the perfection of the provisions. It is a creed that must be observed and cannot be changed.
Idioms and allusions
"Qin and Han Dynasties are the only teachers, not the golden rule," said Zhou Qi of the Qing Dynasty "I'd like to say that those who think that five sheep must be of the same size just regard the art of trademark advertisements of beer, matches and batteries as the golden rule," says Qin Mu in his book "picking up seashells in Yihai · Guangzhou city emblem"
golden rule and precious precept
The dike of a thousand miles is destroyed by the ant nest - qiān lǐ zhī dī,huǐ yú yǐ xué