there were many roads and much business
Liu Jie San Mo, a Chinese idiom, is Li ù Ji ē s ā nmॸin Pinyin, which means "six streets and three markets". From watching the money slave.
Idioms and allusions
[source]: the second fold of Yuan Dynasty's Zheng Tingyu's "looking at the money slave": "it's just like jade carving into six streets and three strangers, just like powder make-up on the pavilions."
Discrimination of words
[pinyin code]: ljsm
Six streets and three markets
Usage: used as an object or attribute
The bus trees
thebusystreets
Chinese PinYin : liù jiē sān mò
there were many roads and much business
Under one man, above ten thousand. yī rén zhī xià,wàn rén zhī shàng