Sit on your own feet
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Zu ò D ì Z ì Hu á, which means not moving on the spot and setting its own scope; it refers to sticking to one end and rejecting others. It comes from the collection of literature and art, the dispute between the old and the new and between Wen and Bai.
The origin of Idioms
Guo Moruo's Anthology of literature and art, the dispute between the old and the new and the literary and colloquial, said: "all works in classical Chinese are regarded as stale ideas, and they also draw their own conclusions."
Idiom usage
Used as an object or attribute; used in writing.
Analysis of Idioms
Painting the earth is a prison
Sit on your own feet
dragons and snakes follow one 's writing brush -- good penmanship - bǐ dǐ lóng shé
see what one has never seen before - jiàn suǒ wèi jiàn
the doctrine of confucius and mencius - kǒng mèng zhī dào
Consider the past and the present - zhuó gǔ cān jīn
flee from evil and strive to walk in fair fortune 's way - bì xiōng qū jí