one 's favour as high as the sky and thick as the earth
Dai tiancuandi, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is d à ITI à NJ í D à, which means you still wear heaven and earth. Head on the sky, feet on the ground. People live between heaven and earth. It refers to the deep and wide virtue, such as heaven and earth. From the tombstone of Cao Chushi.
Idioms and allusions
[source]: the inscription on the tombstone of Cao Chushi written by Fang Xiaoru of Ming Dynasty: "I was the first ancestor of Song Dynasty, followed by the people of Song Dynasty, who lived in heaven and earth for more than 300 years."
Discrimination of words
Synonym: Dai qinglvzhuo usage: used as predicate and object; refers to people living in the world
Chinese PinYin : dài tiān jí dì
one 's favour as high as the sky and thick as the earth
The sun and the moon run through the sky and the rivers run through the land. rì yuè jīng tiān,jiāng hé xíng dì
what has been cannot be withdrawn. sì mǎ mò zhuī
all are besotted except one who remained sober. zhòng zuì dú xǐng
end neither in victory nor defeat. bù fēn shèng fù