mend one 's ways
The Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Q ì Xi é C ó ngzh è ng, which means to stop doing bad things and go on the right road. It comes from the history of the Three Kingdoms, the history of Shu and the biography of Hou Zhu.
Idiom usage
It refers to a person's return to the right way
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: abandon evil and return to the right
The origin of Idioms
"In the spring of the fifth year, the prime minister came out to tunhanzhong and set up a camp in Beiyang, Mianyang and pingshima." Pei Songzhi quoted Liu Chan, the later leader of Zhuge Liangji, as saying: "there are those who can abandon evil and follow the rule of righteousness, and prepare food to meet the king's teacher. There are state-owned regular canons, and there are different kinds of pet
Idiom explanation
Stop doing bad things and get on the right path.
mend one 's ways
regular course of official duties - lì xíng chāi shì
standing like a tripod -- a tripartite balance of forces - dǐng zú ér jū