Breaking the rules
Disobeying the rules, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is w é ITI á ow ǔ f ǎ, which means violating the law. It comes from the statement of interest in the outline.
Analysis of Idioms
Break the law
The origin of Idioms
Su Shi of the Song Dynasty wrote in his treatise on the lack of interest and interest in the top of the Outline: "a spot check on a ship means that all 29 ships have to wait on the shore, which is obviously against the rules and regulations. It is necessary to analyze the text and break the imperial edict."
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate, attribute, or object.
Breaking the rules
eradicate harmful things and set up the business benefit of the people - chú huàn xīng lì
do something perfunctorily as a routing practice - gù shuò xì yáng
Take advantage of the light and drive the fat - chéng qīng qū féi