In and out
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is ch ū R ù w ú Ji ā n, which means "come and go without separation". Freedom to go in and out. The source of the book is Wang Jian, a former Shu family in the history of the new Five Dynasties: "Jian said:" when I was a general of Shence, I stayed in the Imperial Guard and saw the emperor summon the scholars at night. I went out all the time. I was as kind and generous as a Liao. I was not a general. "
Idiom explanation
There's no gap between life and death. Freedom to go in and out.
The origin of Idioms
In the history of the new Five Dynasties, Wang Jian, a former Shu aristocratic family, said: "when I was a general of Shence, I stayed in the guard and saw the emperor summoning scholars at night. I went out all the time. I was as kind and generous as a Liao. I could not be compared with a general."
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: unimpeded
Idiom usage
As a predicate; used of people or things, etc
Chinese PinYin : chū rù wú jiān
In and out
fowls and dogs turn immortals -- relatives and followers of a high official got promotion after him. jī quǎn shēng tiān
both intelligent and courageous. zhì yǒng shuāng quán
load one's pages with references. páng zhēng bó yǐn
I wish you a lump in your throat. zhù yān zhù gěng