all of you
"Er San Jun Zi" is a Chinese idiom. Its pinyin is è RS ā NJ ū NZ ǐ, meaning you er San Zi. It comes from Zuo Zhuan, the 24th year of Duke Fu.
The origin of Idioms
"Zuo Zhuan · the 24th year of the Duke of Fu" says: "the person who is in charge of the worship of Jin Dynasty is not the king, but the heaven has set it up, and the second and third sons think they have the power, so they are not falsely accused."
Idiom usage
Example biography of the king of Chu and yuan in the Han Dynasty: "so I issued an imperial edict of the Ming Dynasty to try the Zuo family. I sent my near ministers to give instructions and help the weak and the weak, and compared with the two or three gentlemen, hoping to get rid of it." sixty old men have nothing to take, two or three gentlemen have nothing to give. A poem by Bao Ji in Tang Dynasty
Chinese PinYin : èr sān jūn zǐ
all of you
The letter covers the whole. hán gài chōng zhōu