the sacred rules of the religious order
Rules and regulations, Chinese idioms, Pinyin is Q ī nggu ī Ji è L ǜ, originally refers to the rules and commandments observed by Buddhists. This is a metaphor for the cumbersome and unreasonable rules and regulations that bind people. From Shimen Zhengtong.
The origin of Idioms
"Shimen Zhengtong" says: "the Zen master Huaihai of Baizhang mountain began to establish the rules of Zen in the world, which is called Qinggui."
Idiom usage
Combined; as subject and object; with derogatory meaning.
Examples
There are many old teachers and students are afraid of him.
2. There should be necessary rules and regulations -- Mao Zedong
the sacred rules of the religious order
sound of footsteps in a deserted valley -- rare , welcome appearance - kōng gǔ zú yīn
beating drums and blowing trumpets - chuī chuī dǎ dǎ