Shift priorities
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y í Hu ǎ NJI ù J í, which means to let go of what is delayed and do what is urgent. It comes from the archives of the railway case in Sichuan Province.
The origin of Idioms
According to a series of modern Chinese history materials, the archives of Sichuan railway case of the 1911 Revolution, the railway protection movement, it is said that "if we divide the order slightly, we should think that if we plan to shift the priority, Sichuan affairs can still be done."
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attributive.
Shift priorities
shave one 's head and become a monk - jiǎn fā pī zī
choose the easy way for convenience - qǔ qiǎo tú biàn
one 's strength does not match one 's ambitions - lì bù cóng xīn