Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy party took nearly 80 percent of contested seats in the November 8 election, promising change after decades of corrosive and corrupt army control of the country.
But she cannot be president under the junta-scripted constitution.
Instead the party leader has vowed to rule from "above the president" -- via a proxy who will be selected by the NLD-dominated legislature in the new year.
New MPs will also have to learn the nuts and bolts of power and policy making as well as deliver on the party's change narrative.
On Saturday NLD lawmakers said Suu Kyi used a party meeting to call for unity and warn newcomers to office that poor discipline or conduct will be punished.
"She doesn't want anyone to build a small building inside the big one," said Thet Thet Khine, an elected NLD MP in Yangon and a prominent party figure.
Another new lawmaker said Suu Kyi cautioned the party against "betraying the people" who overwhelmingly shunned the army-backed ruling party at the polls to give the NLD control of both parliamentary houses.
"She said she will not tolerate any breach of party regulations... And she will take action under the law if MPs make a mistake," Tun Myint, elected for the lower house from Bahan township in Yangon, told AFP.
He said NLD MPs also face a 25 percent salary cut as a gesture to the nation's poor population.
It has 25 per cent of all parliamentary seats gifted to it by a charter that it penned.
But so far it has taken the election result gracefully, pledging to ensure a smooth transition of power to the NLD.
The government will not be formed until next year, with a long transition period between elections and the handover of power.
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