from door to door
Door to door, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is ā im é n ā IH ù, which means that according to the order of households, no one is missing. It comes from the second chapter of Chapter 6 of Li Yingru's wild fire and spring breeze fighting ancient city.
Idiom usage
She went to several villages along the river to beg for bits and pieces of cloth and sewed a colorful hundred family clothes for he Manzi. Liu Shaotang's PU Liu Jia Ren
The origin of Idioms
Li Yingru's "wild fire and spring breeze fighting the ancient city" Chapter 6 2: "she has a plan in mind. She goes door to door and asks people if they want water."
Analysis of Idioms
Door to door, door to door
Chinese PinYin : āi mén āi hù
from door to door
not well organized and without a central theme. lā lā zá zá