Overstepping the rope
Yuesheng Yueqi, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y ú sh é ngyu è Q ì, which means that there are no words before the knot of a rope or a deed. It comes from the biography of Ban Gu in the book of the later Han Dynasty.
Notes on Idioms
A rope or deed refers to a rope or deed. The latter extension refers to the words that can't be read.
The origin of Idioms
"After the Han Dynasty, Ban Gu biography of the next:" overstepping the rope, loneliness and death of the imperial edict, "the Department" can not be decorated
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attributive; used in writing. In fact, the court officials were not able to serve as envoys, and they used civil and military skills to overstep the line. A brief account of Xiong Gongyu's Yin line in yishiguan by Huang Zongxi in Qing Dynasty
Overstepping the rope
Send you thousands of miles, you must say goodbye - sòng jūn qiān lǐ,zhōng xū yī bié
abolish punishment with punishment - yǐ xíng qù xíng