move from place to place
Li ú L í Zhu ǎ nx ǐ, a Chinese idiom, means to move around without a place to settle down. It's from the story of allusions.
Analysis of Idioms
To live and work in peace and contentment
The origin of Idioms
Yu jideng of the Ming Dynasty, Volume 11 of the records of allusions, said: "occasionally, there were those who had gone to Chen Dynasty, but the Ministry did not stop exempting the grain tax because of insufficient state use. As a result, they were cold and discouraged, and they were poor and displaced."
Idiom usage
It refers to moving from place to place. example I, step on my toes, but I can't step on my own land! Destruction by Zhu Ziqing
Chinese PinYin : liú lí zhuǎn xǐ
move from place to place
Bullying the hard and fearing the soft. qī yìng pà ruǎn
keep one 's heart as hard as the nether millstone. xīn rú mù shí
Rely on horses and seven papers. yǐ mǎ qī zhǐ
have the ambition to rise in society. bā gāo wàng shàng