of the consequences
Xiao Yiyi, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Xi ǎ oy ǐ L ì h à I, which means to clarify the interests of things. It comes from the biography of Xue Xiuyi in the book of the Northern Qi Dynasty.
Idiom usage
As a predicate or attribute; used to admonish
Examples
Xiong Zhaozheng's "Zhang Juzheng" Volume 1 Chapter 17: "Zhu Heng there, also hope that Yuan Fu Xiao to benefit, don't let him add chaos."
The origin of Idioms
According to the biography of Xue Xiuyi in the book of the Northern Qi Dynasty, "then I went down to the base lightly, and I learned from him."
of the consequences
different tunes rendered with equal skill - tóng gōng yì qǔ
There is something to be said later - tuì yǒu hòu yán
not swayed by personal considerations - bù xún sī qíng
leave a good name throughout the ages - liú fāng qiān gǔ