Be cautious from beginning to end, a China idiom, pinyin is shèn shǐ jìng zhōng ? ng, which means to be cautious from beginning to end. From the Book of Rites.
The origin of the idiom: The Book of Rites: "Confucius said: Be cautious at the beginning and respect at the end." Han Jiayi's New Book of Prenatal Education: "Yi said:' Everything is based on reason, and a thousand miles a day makes a gentleman cautious. "The Yuan of the Spring and Autumn Period, the Guan Yu of poetry, the crown marriage of ceremony, and the dry Kun of yi are all cautious and respectful."
Sentence: 1, arduous, cautious from beginning to end, loyal to the country, resolute and decisive.
2. Only with awe can we be cautious and respectful; The alarm went off, so the siren didn't go off.
3. Li Shimin, Emperor Taizong of Tang Dynasty, got Wei Zhi who was outspoken, open-minded, politically enlightened, cautious at the beginning and respectful at the end, and created a prosperous time of Zhenguan.
4. However, an eagle-eyed netizen found a suspected "Zhao Zijun" named "Looks like grass" in Weibo, and his user signature, like "Zhao Zijun", is "cautious, starting with respect, getting better every day".
5. Emperor Taizong got an outspoken Wei Zhi. He spoke freely, was modest in coachable, was politically enlightened, was cautious at the beginning and respected at the end, and created a prosperous time of Zhenguan.
6. Leading cadres at all levels should consciously put down the burden of being in a high position, the burden of being above others, and be cautious from beginning to end to draw a satisfactory end for their lives.