可以正衣冠

kěyǐ zhèng yīguān
quotation

Meanings

  1. 1 can be used to straighten one's cap and robes
  2. 2 one can use it to correct one's appearance

Examples

HSK 6
Pīpíng yǔ zìwǒ pīpíng, shì kěyǐzhèngyīguān de hǎo fāngfǎ.
Criticism and self-criticism are good methods by which one can straighten one's 'cap and robes.'
HSK 7-9
Yǐ tóng wéi jìng, kěyǐzhèngyīguān.
Using bronze as a mirror, one can straighten one's cap and robes.

Tips

history
From Emperor Taizong of Tang's famous remark in 《旧唐书·魏徵传》 on the death of his minister Wei Zheng: 以铜为镜可以正衣冠以古为镜可以知兴替以人为镜可以明得失. The triple 'three mirrors' passage: bronze mirror for appearance, history for dynastic rise and fall, and other people for one's own merits and faults.
usage
Almost never quoted alone, it's the first of three parallel clauses. Modern political speeches frequently revive the full 三镜 passage as a metaphor for self-examination.

Stroke Order

zhèng
guān