from house to house
Door to door, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is "ā im é nzh ú h ù", which means that no one is missing, go to each house in order. From Shuoyue Quanzhuan.
Analysis of Idioms
House to house
The origin of Idioms
Chapter 61 of the complete biography of Yue by Qian Cai of Qing Dynasty: "write down the reasons why Marshal Yue and his son were wronged, and assign them from door to door. About the time of Qi Dynasty, they went to the people's court to plead for Lord Yue."
Idiom usage
It is the same as "door-to-door". example during the election, candidates visit voters door to door to canvass for themselves. He sent the notice of the meeting door to door.
Chinese PinYin : āi mén zhú hù
from house to house
hide one 's candle under a bushel. bù lù fēng huì
gather a crowd and make disturbances. jù zhòng zī shì
human effort is the decisive factor. dào zài rén wéi
The fire has been passed down. huǒ jìn xīn chuán
the corpses lie all over the countryside. shī héng biàn yě