Take the emperor to make the world better
It is a Chinese idiom to coerce the emperor to command the world. Pinyin is Xi é Ti ā NZ ǐ y ǐ L ì ngTi ā nxi à, which means to coerce the emperor and give orders in the name of the emperor. This is a metaphor for commanding others in the name of leadership according to one's own will.
Idiom explanation
He coerced the emperor and gave orders in the name of the emperor. This is a metaphor for commanding others in the name of leadership according to one's own will.
Idioms and allusions
In the Western Han Dynasty, Liu Xiang wrote in the Warring States policy, Qin policy: "according to the nine tripods, according to the map book, the emperor was held in order to make the world, and the world would not dare not follow."
Discrimination of words
Synonym: take the emperor to order the princes
usage
It refers to political coercion
Take the emperor to make the world better
attend to the trivialities and neglect the fundamentals - bèi běn qū mò
the river and the great sky are of the same hue - jiāng tiān yī sè
marriages of one's sons and daughters - xiàng píng zhī yuàn
Virtue is simple but practice is weak - dé qiǎn xíng báo
The snipe and the clam fight, and the fisherman gains - yù bàng xiāng zhēng,yú wēng