thousands of turns and twists
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is B ǎ izh é Qi ā nhu í, which means to go through various twists and turns. It comes from "talking about current affairs with Japanese Buddhist friends is a verse.".
The origin of Idioms
Zhao Puchu's "to talk about current affairs with Japanese Buddhist friends is to pick up one verse": "never give up one's heart after a thousand setbacks, only when you are fearless can you be fearless."
Idiom usage
Yang Ji's a long journey along the Yangtze River in the late Yuan and early Ming Dynasties: "my family lives in the west of Minjiang River, where Minjiang River originates. Three Ba spring Ji snow beginning to disappear, back to the East. The river flows to the East for thousands of miles. Today, people are wandering in other villages. When the grass looks like smoke and waves, I hate it. When the ape sounds like wind and rain, I want to break my heart. " In the fifth book of Weixian Shuzhong and shedi written by Zheng Xie of Qing Dynasty, it is said that "Baichuan's essays are of profound essence, which are inspired by Miao's thoughts, profound purpose, material state and human feelings. It is easy to make a death after a thousand twists and turns." In Liang Qichao's "warning the masters of the road", he said, "the general situation is solid, so we have to go out of business." The second chapter of Liu e's travel notes of Lao can in the Qing Dynasty: "Wang Xiaoyu, after singing three or four high songs, suddenly fell down, and tried her best to ride the spirit of many twists and turns, like a flying snake hovering in the middle of the thirty-six legs of Huangshan Mountain, in an instant, several times around."
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms crisscross, twists and turns, twists and turns
Chinese PinYin : bǎi zhé qiān huí
thousands of turns and twists
moan and groan without being ill. wú bìng shēn yīn
gain a superficial understanding through cursory observation. zǒu mǎ kàn huā
a chasm for dragon to hide or a cave for tigers to have their lair. lóng tán hǔ xué