All gold and all evil
Jinjinqiuluo, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is j ī NJ ì nqi ú B ì, which means that the leather robe is broken and the money is used up; it refers to difficult circumstances. It comes from Qi CE Yi, the strategy of the Warring States period.
The origin of Idioms
"Qi CE I of Warring States strategy:" if you say that the book of King Qin is on the top ten, you can't do it. If you say that the fur of sable is bad, you can't do a hundred jin of gold. "
Idiom usage
It is a metaphor of difficult situation.
Examples
All the gold and all the evils, all the shame in the country. Notes of Yuewei thatched cottage (continued record of luanyang, 5)
Chinese PinYin : jīn jìn qiú bì
All gold and all evil
corn which does not bear grain. miáo ér bù xiù
Talk about the past and the present. shuō jīn dào gǔ
the gods are angry and the people resentful. tiān nù rén yuàn
one 's schemes are poor and his strength is exhausted. jì qióng lì qū
people care for nothing but lust. rén yù héng liú
The past is right and the present is wrong. gǔ shì jīng fēi