up hill and down dale
Climbing mountains, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is d ē ngsh ā NYU è L ǐ ng, which means to describe a long journey, hard journey. From journey to the West.
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms: mountain climbing, mountain climbing, mountain climbing
The origin of Idioms
The 100th chapter of journey to the West written by Wu Chengen of Ming Dynasty: "fortunately, he climbed the mountains and crossed the mountains and trudged ruggedly. He rode when he went and carried the Scriptures when he came. He also relied on his strength."
Idiom usage
It is a long journey. The third volume of the romance of the general of the Yang family by Ming Wumingshi: "we need more flags to make the enemy dare not climb the mountains."
Chinese PinYin : dēng shān yuè lǐng
up hill and down dale
so that there is no end [ of our toils. mí suǒ dǐ zhǐ
happiness as immense as the eastern sea. fú rú dōng hǎi
the people are more important than the ruler. mín guì jūn qīng
the public attitude for or against. rén xīn xiàng bèi